Prepositions
Prepositional Phrases are the result of the combination of the prepositions and other elements of the sentence (nouns, pronouns, gerunds).
A Prepositional phrase consists of a preposition and another element of the sentence.
Prepositional Phrases have these structures:
Preposition + noun:
- At + home
- Under + the bridge
- On + time
Preposition + pronoun:
- With + me
- To + everybody
- From + him
Preposition + gerund:
- Without + listening
- After + watching
- Before + going
Preposition + noun:
- She works at home.
- The homeless man sleeps under the bridge.
- The meeting is at 7, I hope that she arrives on time.
Preposition + pronoun:
- You can come to Paris with me.
- I am telling this to everybody.
- I received a letter from him.
Preposition + gerund:
- He left the house without listening to his mom.
- I always go to work after watching television.
- I usually eat breakfast before going to school.
In a sentence a Prepositional Phrase is used:
- As an adjective;
- An adverb (time and place);
- As a noun phrase;
- With double object verbs;
- To show who did something.
Prepositional Phrases are when we combine prepositions with another element of the sentence (a noun, pronoun, gerund, etc.).
For example:
— “I never arrive on time.” = The combination of on (preposition) + time (noun) makes a prepositional phrase.
— “I never arrive on time.” = The combination of on (preposition) + time (noun) makes a prepositional phrase.
— “I never arrive on time.” = The combination of on (preposition) + time (noun) makes a prepositional phrase.
Let’s revise this content within the [Form] section. Take a look at the [Example] section that shows its use within a context.