use the preposition
one of my colleagues insisted on using TO as a preposition for ATTACK. i know she is wrong. what s ur idea?
When using "similar," you can pair it with the preposition "to." For example, "This situation is similar to the one we faced last year."
one very important spring scale rule is never go past the limit of newtons it can go up to.
There is no preposition in "catching fish is one".
As a preposition, but means 'except' and is followed by a noun or pronoun as its object.No one but the mess boys could have taken the strawberries.
Of is a preposition.
No, it is not a preposition. The word one is a noun, pronoun, or adjective.
this is a trick Q like is not a prepositiion actually, like can indeed be a preposition, as in "His new car is like the old one." If you can substitute in another preposition and it still makes sense, then it's a preposition. "His new car is behind the old one." Anything being used to describe a relative comparison is usually a preposition, not just spacial comparisons.
There is no rule requiring one to omit prepositions. Some require that you do not end a sentence with a preposition, but that doesn't mean omit them entirely. Usually one has to use the preposition with a which clause: to which, of which, for which, etc.
"Which one" is not a preposition. A preposition is a part of speech which introduces a related object, for example "over the table," "in the barn," "beside the station," "during class." "Which one" does not take an object. Syntactically, it is a combination of a noun ("one") with an interrogative adjective ("which"). "Which one" could be an object of a preposition (e.g. "On which one did you bestow the gift") but not a preposition.
A function.
a function