English Grammar - Prepositions
English Grammar - Prepositions
English Grammar - Prepositions
Examples to consider:
A
a. Go to 100 Queen’s Street
b. Meet me at 9.15 am
c. Sarah moved away from the blackboard
d. He lives in a place that is far away from us.
e. We drove past a little village
B
a. Please put it on (to) the table
b. Driving fast on the A44
c. Please take your laptop off my table.
d. The shot went wide off the mark
e. We drove along the river
C
a. He poured the water into the bottle.
b. They found the dog somewhere in the old part of the city
c. Harry rarely came out of the broom cupboard in which he lived
d. This is out of the question!
e. We drove through the tunnel
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5. SUMMARY BOX :
Extracted from : A Student’s Grammar of the English Language by S. Greenbaum & R. Quirk (1990) &
Explaining English Grammar, by G. Yule (1998)
8. DIRECTIONALITY :
a. Vertical axis : up, down,
b. Horizontal axis : along, across, through,
9. RELATIVE POSITIONS : Prepositions may also indicate position relative to the position of something
else.
ABOVE
IN
FRONT X BEHIND
OF
BELOW
Also note : over, under, beneath, underneath, on top of, at the bottom of, opposite to , facing,
beside, close to, near to, between, among, about, around,
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10. METAPHORICAL LOCATIONS (often “container” concept)
a. Tell us in your own words
b. Try putting your feelings into words
c. I can’t make any sense out of what he is saying
d. He communicated his beliefs through words
e. Express yourself in complete sentences.
f. They are in love
g. He is in a bad mood
h. At last we were out of danger
i. They went through many difficult times.
Examples to consider:
a. At six o’clock
b. At noon
c. At that time
a. On Monday
b. On March 20th
c. On Sunday morning
a. In October
b. In 1947
c. In summer
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j. Between the trees – between ourselves
k. Through the tunnel – through the ordeal
CAUTION : Many multi-word verbs have a unique, idiomatic meaning – so the generalizations here are
NOT to be treated as being always applicable or true!
OFF
Signals completion of an action; suggests 'disconnected location' with verbs denoting physical action,
a. He fell off the horse.
b. She jumped off the wall.
c. Get off that chair!
d. I took my coat off.
e. I sent off the parcel yesterday.
OUT
Suggests “towards an exterior location” with action verbs as in
a. Throw him out!
b. We were lucky to get out alive.
c. Are you coming out tonight?
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At a more abstract level, it suggests “removal from interior space / from being unknown and hidden /from
group or enclosure / from obligation
a. We found out the facts
b. The facts came out
c. They picked out the best ones,
d. He washed the dirt out
e. He backed out of the agreement.
In multi-word verbs there is also the sense of “change of state”, often the beginning /end of a new
state,
a. We started out early in the morning.
b. They set out much later.
c. He suddenly broke out in a rash.
d. The fire went out.
e. One punch knocked him out.
f. We finally figured out the solution.
AWAY
The basic sense is of “disconnected location”
a. The girl stayed, but the boy ran away.
b. Someone took the boxes away.
c. We chased him, but he got away.
In MWVs, the sense of 'disconnection' extends to mean “unrestrained” or “without control or direction”
a. The baby was babbling away.
b. He was carried away by the music.
c. The soldiers were firing away all night.
d. The fool was throwing away all his money.
Examples & explanations for 14 & 15 adapted from George Yule, Explaining English Grammar, Cambridge
University Press, Cambridge, 1998.