(४) वर्गीकरण करा : (Classily the following :)
(अथवा, झाडाजवळ, अरेरे, हल्ली)
क्रियाविशेषण अव्यय शब्दयोगी अव्यय
उभयान्वयी अव्यय
केवलपोगोन
(५) विरामचिन्हांची नावे लिहा : (Identify the panctuation market
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Answer:
ok mark me as branliest then I
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The answer is as follows:
Explanation:
- Adverb Preposition: Sometimes an adverb is also a preposition, or vice versa. About, up, across, then, sideways, around, before, behind, down, between, beyond, below, inside, near, up, against, outside, outside, up, past, Round, from, through, whole, internal, above, inside, and without are all words that can be used as prepositional adverbs.
- Verbal prefixes: Prepositions are usually used before nouns, as their name implies.
- They're employed to describe a place, a state, or a sequence of occurrences. "In the sink, Nellie rinsed the dishes."
- This statement is ambiguous, and the prepositional phrase can be interpreted in two ways: either as 'Nellie Wash' (in the sink) the dishes, in which case it is an adverb phrase, or as 'Nellie washed the dishes (sink in the dishes, but not that, say) on the table,' in which case it is an adverb phrase.
- It's an adjective phrase in this circumstance. It's pointless to move the prepositional phrase. If I say "Nellie washes the dishes in the sink," it appears that Nellie is standing in the sink.
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