Prepositions

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Prepositions

Prepositions
a word or word phrase that shows a relationship
between a noun or pronoun and other words in a
sentence

a preposition will tell 4 things:


Where something is (location)
Where something is going (direction)
When something happens (time)
The relationship between a noun/pronoun and
another word in a sentence
Prepositions
In your notes, you have 45 seconds to write down
as many prepositions as you can remember

GO
Common Prepositions
About Against
Above At
Across Around
After Behind
Below Beside(s)
Along Between
Alongside Beyond
Among By
Before Down
Beneath During
Theres more.
For Outside
From Over
In Past
Inside Since
Into Through
Like To
Near Toward
Of Under
Off Until
On Up
A few more
Upon
With
Within
Without
Phrasal Prepositions
According to Across from
Because of In back of
In front of In place of
Instead of Next to
Prepositions
Review: What is a preposition?
(you may look at your notes)

o word or word phrase


o shows a relationship between a noun or
pronoun and other words in a sentence -
tells location, direction, time
You can sit before the desk (or in front of the desk).
The professor can sit on the desk (when he's being
informal) or behind the desk, and then his feet are
under the desk or beneath the desk. He can stand
beside the desk (meaning next to the desk), before the
desk, between the desk and you, or even on the desk
(if he's really strange). If he's clumsy, he can bump into
the desk or try to walk through the desk (and stuff
would fall off the desk). Passing his hands over the
desk or resting his elbows upon the desk, he often
looks across the desk and speaks of the desk or
concerning the desk as if there were nothing else like
the desk.
Because he thinks of nothing except the desk,
sometimes you wonder about the desk, what's in
the desk, what he paid for the desk, and if he could
live without the desk. You can walk toward the
desk, to the desk, around the desk, by the desk,
and even past the desk while he sits at the desk or
leans against the desk.

All of this happens, of course, in time: during the


class, before the class, until the class, throughout
the class, after the class, etc. And the professor can
sit there in a bad mood [another adverbial
construction].
Prepositions
Examples:

The famous golfing legend leaned over the tiny,


white, dimpled ball on the ninth tee.
Pedro Feliz launched a ball toward McCovey
Cove, but it bounced off the brick wall.
Prepositions of Time: at, on, and in

We use at to designate specific times.

The train is due at 12:15 p.m.

We use on to designate days and dates.

My brother is coming on Monday.


We're having a party on the Fourth of July.
We use in for nonspecific times during a day, a
month, a season, or a year.

She likes to jog in the morning.


It's too cold in winter to run outside.
He started the job in 1971.
He's going to quit in August.
Prepositions of Place: at, on, and in

We use at for specific addresses.

Sara lives at 55 Boretz Road in Flemington.

We use on to designate names of streets, avenues,


etc.

Her house is on Boretz Road.


And we use in for the names of land-areas
(towns, counties, states, countries, and
continents).

She lives in Durham.


Durham is in Windham County.
Windham County is in Connecticut.
Prepositions of Time: for and since
We use for when we measure time (seconds,
minutes, hours, days, months, years).

He held his breath for seven minutes.


She's lived there for seven years.
The British and Irish have been quarreling for
seven centuries.
We use since with a specific date or time.

He's worked here since 1970.


She's been sitting in the waiting room
since two-thirty.
Prepositions of Movement:
to and toward/towards
We use to in order to express movement toward a
place.

They were driving to work together.


She's going to the dentist's office this morning.
Toward and towards are also helpful prepositions
to express movement. These are simply variant
spellings of the same word; use whichever sounds
better to you.

We're moving toward the light.


This is a big step towards the project's
completion.
THANK YOU

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