Prepositions
Prepositions are words that link a noun or a
pronoun to another word in the sentence.
A noun always follows a preposition. A prepositional phrase is a preposition and its object. A prepositional phrase can be two or three words long, as these examples show: on the roof, in the door, under the bed.
However, prepositional phrases can be much longer, depending on the length of the preposition and number of words that describe the object of the preposition.
- There is a cat on
the roof.
- He is fond of
children.
- She sat by
the fire.
- The lion and the
unicorn fought for the crown.
When we use verbs after prepositions, we use -ing forms, not infinitives.
- We are thinking
of visiting them. (NOT We are thinking of to visit them.)
- He insisted on
being paid at once. (NOT He insisted on to be paid at once.)
- I hate the idea of
getting old.
- I am not very good at cooking.
-
- I look
forward to seeing you soon.
- She objected to my entering her room.
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