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the word in caps is either an adverb or preposition, please identiy.
Tomorrow our new neighbors will move IN.
THROUGH which door did Alice go?
Joan will carry the project THROUGH.

Next Correlative conjunctions.
For the sentence, "The city of Istanul is in both Europe and Asia" my brother put as the correlative conjunction as 'and' but wouldn't it be both 'or' and 'and'? Basically, does he have to have two words for his answers?

Thanks for the help!

2007-03-03 09:31:19 · 3 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Languages

3 answers

"Through" is a preposition.

I would incline toward "The city of Istanbul is in both Europe and Asia." since it's inclusive rather than exclusive.

2007-03-03 09:36:51 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

I'm American, I don't speak English. It's been many years since I studied this. It's been so long since I was in school. They didn't have History class, it was Current Events. In the sentence, I believe the part "in both Europe and Asia" is a prepositionary phrase, I think that's what it's called. "Tomorrow our new neighbors will move IN. " "In" is the adverb. "THROUGH which door did Alice go?" "Through" is the preposition. "Joan will carry the project THROUGH." "Through is an adverb. I think those are correct.

2007-03-03 17:46:38 · answer #2 · answered by 4:20 3 · 0 2

In and through are both prepositions.

Correlative conjunctions work in pairs. The answer is "both...and". Write it just like that.

2007-03-03 17:38:51 · answer #3 · answered by Doethineb 7 · 1 0

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