You don’t have to be a native English speaker to understand the importance of prepositions. The usage of “after” before a verb, the preposition “after,” and the preposition “because” are all prepositions.
After is a preposition, which means it can be used before a noun or a preposition. So, for example, you could say, “He got up because he was tired.
After makes a lot of sense to me, especially because I know it to be correct for the preposition because, and is the only preposition that doesn’t sound right.
So, it makes sense to me to say, he got up because he was tired, right? But the rest of you seem to think that the preposition was used after the preposition because, which means you’d be saying, he got up because he was tired because he was tired.
I’m not sure if it’s because I’m trying to figure out what you’re trying to say here or if the preposition makes the sentence harder to understand. I’m not convinced either way. Either way, I think we’re off on a tangent. We don’t have to agree if you like or dislike, I just think this sentence makes no sense.
This is a really good point and I don’t think the preposition was used after the preposition because it was used after the preposition. He got up because he was tired and he was tired because he got up. That’s not what we’re talking about.
Our sentence was off just because we didnt know what the preposition was going to be. It wasnt like it was a contraction. We dont have to use the preposition in a sentence if you dont like it.
We can’t say if you are after a preposition because it could be after a pronoun. But if we give you a preposition like “to be”, you might be after a pronoun like “to be”, since “to be” is a contraction.
He got up because he was tired and he was tired because he got up.
If you are after a preposition, you might be after a pronoun. A preposition is a word that stands for something else.A preposition is a word that stands for another word, which is what we are after.