| 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. |
Daily Archives: November 25, 2012
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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? |
| 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. |
