Daily Archives: November 25, 2012

Aside
Preposition Use Example
on days of the week on Monday
in months / seasons
time of day
year
after a certain period of time (when?)
in August / in winter
in the morning
in 2006
in an hour
at for night
for weekend
a certain point of time (when?)
at night
at the weekend
at half past nine
since from a certain point of time (past till now) since 1980
for over a certain period of time (past till now) for 2 years
ago a certain time in the past 2 years ago
before earlier than a certain point of time before 2004
to telling the time ten to six (5:50)
past telling the time ten past six (6:10)
to / till / until marking the beginning and end of a period of time from Monday to/till Friday
till / until in the sense of how long something is going to last He is on holiday until Friday.
by in the sense of at the latest
up to a certain time
I will be back by 6 o’clock.
By 11 o’clock, I had read five pages.

Prepositions of Time

Aside

A preposition is a word that shows the relationship between its object and some other word in a sentence.

Example: The birds flew through the air.

In this example, the word “through” is a preposition because it is used to show the  relationship between word “flew” and its object “the air”.

  • The mouse ran across the room.
  • The chair is beside the table.
  • I am at the University of North Carolina.
  • The crocodile is under the water.
  • We are in English class.
  • The stoplight hangs above the street.
  • The children are running around the room as fast as they can.
  • My cat jumped onto the table.
  • When you sing, sound comes out of your mouth.
  • The river runs over the rocks.

Prepositions of Place (IN/AT/ON)

IN

Use ‘in’ with spaces:

  • in a room / in a building
  • in a garden / in a park

Use ‘in’ with bodies of water:

  • in the water
  • in the sea
  • in a river

Use ‘in’ with lines:

  • in a row / in a line
  • in a queue

AT

Use ‘at’ with places:

  • at the bus-stop
  • at the door
  • at the cinema
  • at the end of the street

Use ‘at’ with places on a page:

  • at the top of the page
  • at the bottom of the page

Use ‘at’ in groups of people:

  • at the back of the class
  • at the front of the class

ON

Use ‘on’ with surfaces:

  • on the ceiling / on the wall / on the floor
  • on the table

Use ‘on’ with small islands:

  • I stayed on Maui.

Use ‘on’ with directions:

  • on the left
  • on the right
  • straight on

IMPORTANT NOTES

In / at / on the corner

We say ‘in the corner of a room’, but ‘at the corner (or ‘on the corner’) of a street’.

In / at / on the front

  • We say ‘in the front / in the back’ of a car.
  • We say ‘at the front / at the back’ of buildings / groups of people.
  • We say ‘on the front / on the back’ of a piece of paper.
Preposition Use Examples
above higher than sth. The picture hangs above my bed.
across from one side to the other side You mustn’t go across this road here.
There isn’t a bridge across the river.
after one follows the other The cat ran after the dog.
After you.
against directed towards sth. The bird flew against the window.
along in a line; from one point to another They’re walking along the beach.
among in a group I like being among people.
around in a circular way We’re sitting around the campfire.
behind at the back of Our house is behind the supermarket.
below lower than sth. Death Valley is 86 meters below sea level.
beside next to Our house is beside the supermarket.
between sth./sb. is on each side Our house is between the supermarket and the school.
by near He lives in the house by the river.
close to near Our house is close to the supermarket.
down from high to low He came down the hill.
from the place where it starts Do you come from Tokyo?
in front of the part that is in the direction it faces Our house is in front of the supermarket.
inside opposite of outside You shouldn’t stay inside the castle.
into entering sth. You shouldn’t go into the castle.
near close to Our house is near the supermarket.
next to beside Our house is next to the supermarket.
off away from sth. The cat jumped off the roof.
onto moving to a place The cat jumped onto the roof.
opposite on the other side Our house is opposite the supermarket.
out of leaving sth. The cat jumped out of the window.
outside opposite of inside Can you wait outside?
over above sth./sb. The cat jumped over the wall.
past going near sth./sb. Go past the post office.
round in a circle We’re sitting round the campfire.
through going from one point to the other point You shouldn’t walk through the forest.
to towards sth./sb. I like going to Australia.

Can you come to me?
I’ve never been to Africa.

towards in the direction of sth. We ran towards the castle.
under below sth. The cat is under the table.
up from low to high He went up the hill.

Prepositions of Place