IN the sentence: We'll stay in the city for long.
are the prepositional phrases in the city and for long?
How is long an Oby/noun of the preposition?
I propose a slight change to the idea of a "prepositional phrase" that agrees with that of the many old grammar books. " The full prepositional phrase therefore comprises the antecedent + the preposition + the consequent. Most dictionaries and grammar books today only consider the preposition + the consequent as comprising the "prepositional phrase," but semantically, it should consider both terms.
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I propose a slight change to the idea of a "prepositional phrase" that agrees with that of the many old grammar books. Similar to a conjunction, a preposition is a word that connects two or more ideas in a sentence or phrase, the earlier word being the "antecedent" and the later word being the "consequent." The full prepositional phrase therefore comprises the antecedent + the preposition + th
cpu paint 500IN the sentence: We'll stay in the city for long.
are the prepositional phrases in the city and for long?
How is long an Oby/noun of the preposition?
In my experience 'for long' is only used in non-affirmative contexts, so I'd expect We won't stay in the city for long.
However, this is beside the point where your