Correct Use of Prepositions
A preposition is a
word that shows the relationship between a noun or pronoun and
that of another noun or pronoun.
e.g. The book is on the table.
e.g. This
telephone message came from your wife.
e.g. Everybody can
go except you.
e.g. The house is
situated between the river and
the wood.
e.g. That piece of
cake was shared among the three boys.
(NOT between: between is for two; among is
for more than two)
Some words can be
a preposition as well as a conjunction.
e.g. He stood before the window. (preposition
indicating the relationship between the man and the window)
e.g. Before the
police came, the man had fled. (before is a subordinating
conjunction joining two otherwise independent clauses the police came and the
man had fled)
Consider the following
sentences:
e.g. The police came, the
man had fled. (incorrect: without a conjunction)
e.g. The police
came, and the man had fled. (correct with a
conjunction)
e.g. Before the
police came, the man had fled (improved: showing the sequence of
events with the addition of the subordinating conjunction before)
Do not use
prepositions unnecessarily.
e.g. Where are you
going to? (NO to)
e.g. Don’t go near to the
lake. (NO to)
e.g. The child fell
off from his bike. (NO from)
A preposition can
introduce a word group called a prepositional phrase or verbal
idiom:
Accompanied by
e.g. All
children will be accompanied by their parents.
Accompanied with
e.g. His speech was accompanied
with slander and accusation. (linked with; containing)
Accountable for
e.g. As an adult, you
are accountable for your actions. (responsible for)
Accountable to
e.g. Your are directly accountable
to the manager, and not your supervisor. (reporting to a person)
Agree on
e.g. This is something
we can never agree on.
Agree to
e.g. I agreed
to paying the damages.
Agree with
e.g. I can never agree
with you as far as this is concerned.
Angry at
e.g. I was angry
at your irresponsible behavior.
Angry with
e.g. Are you still angry
with me?
Contend for
e.g. The job situation
is bad: more than fifty applicants contend for that position.
(compete for)
Contend with
e.g. To succeed, you
must contend with your lack of confidence. (overcome
an obstacle)
Differ
from
e.g. Your account of
the event is different from that of your brother.
Differ with
e.g. You differ
with your brother on this issue. (disagree)
Grateful for
e.g. We should all be grateful
for our blessings from God.
Grateful to
e.g. You should be grateful
to your parents for what they have done for you.
Impatient at
e.g. Now I am becoming
more impatient at your lack of enthusiasm. (angry)
Impatient for
e.g. We are impatient
for a response from the government. (waiting eagerly for a
result)
Reconcile to
e.g. My grandfather reconciled himself to old
age. (accept an outcome)
Reconcile with (resolve differences)
e.g. The two brothers
finally reconciled with each other and resolved their
differences.
Stephen Lau
Copyright© by Stephen
Lau
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