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Prepositions always link a noun, a pronoun, or a word acting as a noun to another word in the sentence. The noun type normally comes after the preposition and is called the object of the preposition. The preposition plus its object and any other words describing the object is called a prepositional phrase. Prepositional phrases act as adjectives or adverbs, and add details to a sentence. They can tell the location of something, or when, how, and where something happens. Examples: Basic sentence: The man runs. The man runs on the sidewalk. The man runs on a trail by the water. The man runs before eating breakfast. The man runs past the library every day. The man runs along the side of the road. The man runs at night. The man runs instead of walking. The man is running to catch a bus. The man runs with his large dog. The man runs like a professional athlete.
The words in bold are prepositions. The underlined words are the object of the preposition. Together they are a prepositional phrase. Each one adds details like how or where or when the man runs. Prepositional phrases can be at the start, middle, or the end of a sentence: According to the newspaper, the companys profits increased last month. The accounting job at the company was a great learning experience. Note: Prepositional phrases can never be a sentence. They do not have a subject or main verb.
We eat lunch at noon. We finish work at 6pm. In is used with other parts of the day, with months, years, or seasons: They walk in the afternoon. His vacation is in October. The company started in 1999. Leaves change color in fall. To show longer periods of time, the prepositions most commonly used are: Since For By Within From / until From / to During They have been gone since last week. Charles is going on vacation for three weeks. We must finish this project by Friday. We must finish this project within a week. The resort is open from fall until spring. The conference runs from Monday to Friday. I read during my lunch break.
Places The prepositions in, at, and on are used with different kinds of places: In Used before large places (name of a We stopped in the park. country, state, province, county or city) and small places (a room, building, park, car, boat). Used with specific addresses. We live at 441 Main Street. Can also be used with some small places: class, school, the library, home, work and the office. Used before middle-sized places: a ship, We took the boat on the river. train, plane, and the name of a street, road, coast, or river.
At
On
To show something is higher than something else, use above or over. To show something is lower than a place, use under, underneath, below, or beneath.
Examples: The book is on a shelf above the desk. The disk is underneath the file folder. The painting hangs over the desk. The computer is kept under the desk.
To show the location of something in relation to something else, use the following prepositions: He lives near a school. She parked her car next to mine. The van parked between a truck and a car. The hospital is by the library. His folder is among the others.
Direction Some words that show a location do not use any preposition: home, upstairs, downstairs, downtown, uptown, inside (noun), outside (noun). Incorrect: He went on home. Correct: He went home. Incorrect: The kids are playing at outside. Correct: The kids are playing outside. The following prepositions show movement toward something: To Onto Into Used to show movement towards something Used to show movement towards a surface used to show movement towards the interior of a volume He ran to school. He put his cup onto the table. He jumped into the pool. Incorrect: They went up upstairs. Correct: They went upstairs.
It would also be correct to say, He jumped in the pool. In and on can be used with many verbs showing motion. In / into and on / onto can both be used to show that a motion is finished. However, only in and on can show the location of the subject as a result of an action (verb): Examples Correct: He fell on the floor. He fell onto the floor. Correct: He is on the floor. Incorrect: He is onto the floor. Correct: The book is on the table. Incorrect: The book is onto the table.
The preposition to also shows direction when used with verbs of motion: move, go, transfer, walk, run, swim, ride, drive, fly, or travel. The preposition toward can be used also with these verbs except transfer. To is used to show a specific location. Toward is used to only show a general location.
Examples Drive to the house. Drive toward the house. Correct: He will transfer to another bus. Incorrect: He will transfer toward another bus. (Transfer means to go from one place to another, specific, place so toward cannot be used.) Another use of to is to show a goal that will be reached. For a physical place, the form is to plus a noun: to work, to school, to the library. For a purpose or reason, the form is to plus the infinitive of a verb: to go, to get, to reach. Examples Every morning she goes to work. He washed his car to get rid of the mud.
Unnecessary Prepositions Sometimes prepositions are used when they are not needed. They might be heard in conversation, but they are not grammatically correct. These are some examples: call up, off of, inside of, outside of, stir up, finish up, sit down, return back, help out, fall over, out of, escape from, jump up, open up, except for, later on. In each, the preposition in bold should NOT be used. Examples Incorrect: She asked me to jump up and down. Correct: She asked me to jump. (Jump already means to go up into the air and come back down.) Incorrect: Be careful not to fall over. Correct: Be careful not to fall. (Fall already means go from a higher to a lower level.) Incorrect: She threw the book out of the window. Correct: She threw the book out the window.