Incomplete question. However, I inferred you need help understanding when a word is categorized as a preposition.
<u>Explanation</u>:
In simple terms, a preposition refers to a word or group of words in a sentence that is placed before a noun, pronoun, or noun phrase in other to tell the time, direction/location, or place of an object.
Common examples of words to look o for that can act as a preposition in a sentence include:
- "in,"
- "inside"
- "on,"
- "at,"
- "across"
- "behind"
- "of,"
- "to" etc.
New title did Macbeth receives early in act one is Thane of Cawdor
Explanation:
Right after Macbeth faces the witches who prophecize to him the imminent events which make him wary, Macbeth finds out that the King becomes compassionate to him and makes him the Thane of Cowdor after the old Thane rebelled against the crown and got hanged for it.
The new thane of Cawdor was a good position for him to have and confirmed that he is on his way up towards the crown which the witches prophesied for him. This made Macbeth believe the prophecy.
In the Plessy vs Ferguson case, the surpreme court ruled the "Separate but equal" law in which segregation was allowed but they had to have equal privileges. Example you could separate people in different train cars, but they had to both be comfy and Clean.
To make it out of a situation unharmed/alive.
The mouse was being chased by a cat, but it survived by escaping into its hole.