5 Prepositions
The clue to remembering the job of prepositions is right in the name: preposition. Prepositions indicate how things are related to one another in a sentence, and most of the time that means expressing their relative positions in space, time, or order.
Click on the + icons below to see how prepositions work.
Some Common Prepositions
There are many prepositions — too many to list here — but the following table includes many of the most common ones.
Place/Position | Movement/Direction | Time | Other |
amid / among | across | after | about |
above / over | against | before | according to |
at | along | during | for |
behind | around | since | like |
below/under | from | until | of |
beside | into | with | |
between | off | ||
by | past | ||
in / within | through | ||
on / upon | to / toward |
Prepositions Don’t Work Alone
Imagine you asked me to borrow a pen and I replied, “Sure thing! Look in.” In what? you might ask. Although prepositions are really helpful, they don’t work if they’re left on their own. Instead, they work as part of a prepositional phrase that includes a preposition (like in) and at least one additional word that answers the question “in what?”
Let’s see a few examples to illustrate the concept:
The motorcycle is parked between two big trucks.
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- preposition is “between.” Between what? “Between two big trucks”
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Marjorie walked past me.
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- preposition is “past.” Past whom? “Past me”
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Soccer season starts after the first day of school.
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- first preposition is “after.” After what? “After the first day”
- second preposition is “of”. Of what? “Of school”
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Notice a pattern to all three prepositional phrases?
- They always start with a preposition.
- They always end with a noun or pronoun.
Prepositional phrases can also include adjectives, and sometimes they will be strung together in a chain. That’s because a prepositional phrase does the same job as adjectives and adverbs: they modify other parts of a sentence.