Asked by Bayarbold
What is the object of preposition in English grammar?
What is its grammar explanation?How different between object and object of preposition?
What is its grammar explanation?How different between object and object of preposition?
Answers
Answered by
bobpursley
prepositional phrases describe a noun or verb. They are used for "color" in writing. The prepositional phrase consist of the preposition, the object, and maybe some modifiers of the object.
What is the object (of <u>preposition</u> (in English <u>Grammar</u>))?
I have underlined the object in each phrase.
My cat is in the <u>tree</u>.
The car went through the <u>fence</u>.
My niece is in Northern <u>Texas</u>.
The Governer spoke a gaffe at the Hispanic <u>conference</u>. He should not have made the Mexican joke about beer guzzing, at <u>least</u>, not in a Hispanic <u>convention</u>. I wonder if his fans really think he is suitable for a <u>candidate</u> in the upcoming <u>election</u>. Such is life, in these <u>times</u>.
So can you identify the prepostions, and see the relationship with its object?
What is the object (of <u>preposition</u> (in English <u>Grammar</u>))?
I have underlined the object in each phrase.
My cat is in the <u>tree</u>.
The car went through the <u>fence</u>.
My niece is in Northern <u>Texas</u>.
The Governer spoke a gaffe at the Hispanic <u>conference</u>. He should not have made the Mexican joke about beer guzzing, at <u>least</u>, not in a Hispanic <u>convention</u>. I wonder if his fans really think he is suitable for a <u>candidate</u> in the upcoming <u>election</u>. Such is life, in these <u>times</u>.
So can you identify the prepostions, and see the relationship with its object?