The preposition is fine. However, the question technically should read: Does this sentence use a preposition properly? Connor waited in line while Ava parked the car.
Yes.The preposition (in) is used correctly.
"I might of lent him the book, if he had asked" is incorrect. It's not might of, it's might have. The second sentence is correct.
I parked my car in the driveway
Verbs are only simple when in a sentence, with one verb.I parked the car outside the cinema.This is a past simple sentence. It has one verb in the past tense - parked
Verbs are only simple when in a sentence, with one verb.I parked the car outside the cinema.This is a past simple sentence. It has one verb in the past tense - parked
He parked in an adjacent space.
depends on whether or not the car is parked well. if the car is parked properly, in the right spot then it should be the car that hit it that is at fault.
As long as the parked vehicle is parked properly and not illegally parked in any manner, then the vehicle that rear-ended the parked car is at fault. Now if the parked car is sitting illegally (such as double parked or parked in a no parking zone, etc.) then the parked car is at fault or even both the parked car AND the car that hits it are BOTH at fault.
I parked my boat at a harbor
He parked in an authorized area
Example sentence - I parked my car in the driveway each night.
Those carriages are double parked!