Prepositions
Prepositions are small words that show the relationship between people, places, things, actions, and time.
They can tell us about:
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location
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direction
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time
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origin
-
possession
Examples:
Common Prepositions
Some common English prepositions are:
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to
-
at
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from
-
for
-
between
-
among
-
of
-
in
-
on
-
about
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with
-
without
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before
-
after
-
during
-
by
-
toward
-
against
In, At, and On
These prepositions are often used for place and time.
In
Use in with:
-
cities
-
provinces/states
-
countries
-
months
-
years
Examples:
At
Use at with:
-
specific places
-
specific times
Examples:
On
Use on with:
Examples:
For and Since
For
Use for to show a period of time (duration).
Examples:
Since
Use since to show the starting point of an action.
Examples:
From and Of
From
Use from to show where something comes from (origin).
Examples:
Of
Use of to show possession or a part-whole relationship.
Examples:
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A friend of mine called me.
-
The front of the house is blue.
-
The cover of the book is damaged.
Common Mistake: Could Of
Do not use of after modal verbs.
❌ I could of done that.
✅ I could have done that.
❌ She should of called.
✅ She should have called.
❌ They would of helped.
✅ They would have helped.
Special Expressions
Remember these common expressions:
✅ in the morning
✅ in the afternoon
✅ in the evening
✅ at night
Examples:
Remember
-
Use in for cities, countries, months, and years.
-
Use at for specific places and times.
-
Use on for days, streets, and transportation.
-
Use for to show duration.
-
Use since to show a starting point.
-
Use from for origin.
-
Use of for possession and part-whole relationships.
-
Write could have, not could of.