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Your check in and check out here are two fixed phrases, the meaning of check-in and check-out, and there is no need to follow the object, of course, you can take an adverbial, such as check-in at what hotel.
Another: check-in, check-in, is to fill in the check-in for the guest**, including; Name, gender, nationality, place of residence, ID card (foreigner's passport) number, contact**, number of days of stay. The deposit (to be filled in by the hotel) will be given back to the guest, and the key to the hotel room will be given to the guest.
Check-in, check-in, help passengers check in their baggage, reserve seats on board, print boarding passes, and require guests to present valid documents, including ID cards, passports, military ID, soldier ID, temporary ID cards, etc.
In airports, it is commonly known as cheak in -area
check in
1.Arrival and check-in; Report.
he has just checked in at the hotel.
He had just completed his stay at the hotel.
2.Recording.
the ticket agent checked in the passengers one by one.
The conductor registers the passengers one by one.
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Check in can also be followed by an object, as in is a preposition.
i want to check in my luggage.
I want to check in my baggage.
If it's in a hotel, it translates: I want to leave my luggage here.
If it's just a person going through the formalities, just say it.
i'd like to check in.That's it.
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Prepositions are generally used in front of nouns or pronouns to indicate the relationship between the word and other components of the sentence. The noun or pronoun that follows the preposition is called the prepositional object (or accusative if it is a personal pronoun). The preposition and the object of the preposition are combined to form a prepositional phrase.
Main uses: 1. Common prepositions that indicate at a certain time: at, on, in, etc.
2. Common prepositions for periods: during, for, over, within, throughout, from and to, etc.
3. Prepositions that indicate other concepts of time: before, after, since, until, till, between, up to, etc.
4. When used as a predicate, an English preposition can indicate an action that is being "carried out".
5. Prepositions that express "method, means" are commonly used by, with, through, etc.
6. Intransitive verbs cannot be directly related to the object, and there is no passive voice. However, when paired with prepositions, intransitive verbs can not only be related to the object, but also have a passive voice.
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No.
Object usage: show me (indirect object) your tickets (direct object), pleasePlease let me see your ticket.
The object is generally used after the transitive verb to indicate the object to which the action verb is involved.
1. Nouns as objects.
show your passport, please.Please show your passport.
2. Pronouns as objects.
she didn't say anything.She didn't say anything. (Indefinite pronouns here).
3. Number words as objects.
how many do you want? —i want two.How many do you want? I want two.
how much milk do you want? —a bottle.How much milk do you want? — A bottle.
4. Nominal adjectives as objects.
they sent the injuredto the hospital.They took the wounded to the hospital.
5. Infinitive or ing form as the object.
they asked to see my passport.They asked to see my passport.
i enjoy working with you.I've had a great time working with you.
6. Clause as object.
did you write downwhat he said?Did you write down his words?
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Yes, rarely: the city health department is giving us until this eveningThe deadline given to us by the Municipal Health Department is until tonight.
But the phenomenon of prepositional phrases as objects does exist, although only in a few cases.
Moreover, prepositional phrases generally only act as the object of another preposition, which is also extremely rare, such as: from and until
Also, an adverb can also act as an object of a preposition.
For example: the tiger jumped from behind the treeThe tiger jumped out from behind the tree.
The prepositional phrase behind the tree is the object of the preposition from.
Another example: I worked hard until last night
The adverb phrase last night (functionally similar to a prepositional phrase) is the object of until.
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No, prepositional phrases are generally used as adverbials.
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Answers for you.
tidy up has no object here, so up here is an adverb.
First, you have to figure out the difference between adverbs and prepositions.
Prepositions must be followed by an object. Prepositions, also known as prepositions, are virtual words that do not make any separate sentence components in a sentence. The preposition must be followed by a noun, a noun phrase or a noun clause as its object to form a prepositional phrase, which can be used as a variety of sentence components in a sentence.
Second, the method of differentiation can be referred to:
It is the adverb come in that that there is no object after it
The object in front of it is an adverb, and the get them in object must be placed after it is the preposition, look at me
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Here up is an adverb, not a preposition. tidy is both a transitive and an intransitive verb. If it is the usage of a transitive verb, the object can never be omitted.
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tidy up is both a transitive and an intransitive verb.
i'll tidy up while you make the dinner.You make dinner, I'll clean up.
we should tidy up the place before we move in.
We should have cleaned up the place before we moved in.
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If a transitive verb is not formed after a preposition after an intransmissible verb, it cannot be regarded as an adverbial. For example: he often looks for his pen
In this sentence, looks for should be seen as a predicate and his pen should be an object.
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The first question, where is your company located?That's right. The following in is a preposition, which needs to have an object, and now where is an interrogative adverb, which cannot be used as the object of the preposition in, so it does not need to be added.
If you change the question word to a noun, you need to add in, e.g., which place is your company located in?
The second question, taste is a transitive verb, which needs to be followed by an object, and it is correct to add it. Whether after you taste it is placed before or after the main clause, this it is a must.
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Locate vt pinpoint vi founded.
From the meaning of the sentence to ask where the company was founded, locate does not need an object at this time, where is an adverb not an object, so where is your company located.
you will love this after you taste it.After you taste it temporal adverbial, taste is a transitive verb that needs an object. So add it.
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The components of a sentence are made up of: subject, predicate, and object. Let me give you an example.
I like roses", where "I" is the subject, "like" is the predicate, and "rose" is the object. The object is generally a noun or noun phrase, and generally speaking, the object is followed by the predicate. As for prepositions, I'll give you an example.
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youdo
notneed
toworry
aboutthis
problem.
You don't have to worry about that.
The so-called object of a preposition.
It's a noun, a noun phrase, or even a noun that is placed after a preposition.
Object clause. Or some pronouns.
For example, about in the previous sentence is a preposition, and its object is thisproblem.
Other prepositions such as from, over, in, out or something must have an object, and it is difficult to have a real meaning when they exist alone.
achair
inthegarden
In the garden. of a chair.
In preposition, garden object.
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** of prepositions, at the beginning, verbs do not need to add prepositions, but later when the verb describes things, the meaning expressed is not detailed and accurate enough, then the preposition appears, the preposition is the excessive meaning, the original meaning of the verb is slightly over-extended, so as to describe another thing well, this is the function of the preposition, so when you encounter English verbs in the future, why use prepositions and do not use English prepositions when entangled, then there is a low heart. There is nothing that is not immutable, verbs, prepositions, etc. have particularities, don't drill the horns of the bull. For example, this style will be in out where the preposition does not need an object, and most of the time, the preposition needs to be added with an object of the preposition, such as i', m lost in wood This is where the preposition needs an object.
You see, a lot of times, English prepositions are very flexible, and nothing is dead.
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It is used with verbs to form phrases, such as: walk in, come out, etc.
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