Prepositions of Space and Movement

 

Most of the following prepositions can be used for both space and movement depending on the meaning of the rest of the sentence.

 

Above, across, against, along, alongside, among, around, at, away from, before, behind, below, beneath, beside, between, beyond, by, by (the edge/side of), down, far(away) from, from, as(far)as, in, in back of, in front of, inside of, in the middle of, into, near, next to, off, on, opposite , out, out of, outside, over, past, round, through, throughout, to, towards, underneath, up.

 

Do not put of after another preposition unless the dictionary shows it. Do not , for example, write off of orbehind of. When the of can be used or left out , leave it out.

 

Many preposition forms can be used as adverbs, but not all of them can. Some of the adverb forms must have another preposition added:Away and far are adverbs, but away from and far from are prepositions.

 

Shirley is waiting outside the door.( Prepositional phrase used adverbially).

Shirley is waiting outside. ( adverb).

 

The prepositional phrase gives more information that the single-word adverb.

 

Some adverbs are very similar to but not exactly the same as related prepositions.

 

The taxi was waitingnear the hotel.(prepositional phrase)

The taxi was waitingnearby.(adverb)

 

Learn the set phrases with prepositions of space.

 

Harriet lives in Denver.(a city)

In Colorado.( a state or province).

On Green Avenue (street without a number)

At 261 Green Avenue(street with a number)

In room 261 or Apartment 210-A(specific room or apartment)

Harriet’s friends live inCanada(country)

At oraway from home

Ona farm

Ina dormitory, apartment, house, student hostel

Inpoverty, wealth, a city, a suburb, a town, a village

In the South, West(section or region)

The plane landedin Chicago

At O’Hare Airport.

At the Chicago Airport.

 

Harriet lives at 261 Green Avenue, Denver, Colorado.

The plane landed at O’Hare Airport, Chicago.

We are going to visit our cousin in Denver.

He is in college

At the University

We are goingacross the Rocky Mountains

Across the Mississippi River

Acrossthe desert

Their house is located on the beach.

On the ocean.

At the shore

In the mountains

On the river, bank, bay, lake

In the deserts.

On the plains.

Note: When you do not put a preposition between different pieces of information about place, use a comma.

 

Use between to show a location that has two points of reference, but use among to show a location that has more than two points of reference.

 

Our house isbetween the house of the Andersons and the house of the Simpsons.

My car is parkedamong hundreds in the parking lot , between Joe’s car and Cliff’s car.

 

Use to show directions in some phrases.

 

Perpendicular to horizontal to the north, south, west, east, next to

 

But: north, south, east, west.

Note: Compound compass directions made of two words are written as one word and always begin with north or south. Precise definitions for navigation are usually given in degrees.

 

Northwest, northeast, southeast, southwest, east by northeast, west southwest

 

Do not capitalize points of the compass when they mean direction.

 

Prepositions that show space and movement often introduce essential information that tells which one. These phrases are adjective phrases and follow the noun or pronoun they modify.

 

The buses in the city run every ten minutes.

The houseson the bay were damaged by the hurricane.

 

 

Prepositions of Time

After, as late as, before, during, for (+period of time), in, on, prior to, since (+point of time), to, till, until, up to, upon.

Most prepositions of time cannot be used as single-word adverbs in the way that prepositions of space and movement can. After, before, sinceand until can introduce dependent adverb clauses.

 

Since can be used as a single-word adverb.

 

The dogs chased the cat, and the cat has not been seen since.

During, for andsince have special uses. During and for are followed by a period of time. During means while the event is in progress.For marks the length of time or an appointed time.

 

This tree has been herefor two hundred years.

Ted will wait for ten minutes; then he will leave.

He waited foran hour.

 

But: Pat has an appointment for 3:00.

Duringthe 1960s many nations of Africa became independent.

We sat on the grass during the concert in the park. ( during the time of the concert).

 

Sincemarks the beginning of a period of time. It can be used with a point in time and mean from that time until now. As a prepositionsince is usually used with the present perfect or the present perfect continuous/progressive tense in the main clause.

 

Pat has been waiting since 2.30.

Since 1960 many nations of Africa have become independent.

We have been sitting on the grass since 5:00 waiting for the concert to start.

Since finding a new roommate, Martha has been happier.