A prepositional phrases is a group of words consisting of a preposition and a noun, pronoun, gerund, or clause.
She tried to calm down the baby by singing lullabies
A prepositional phrase always consist of two basic parts at minimum: the preposition and its object.
I think I'll be at * home *
A prepositional phrase is a group of words that can consist of:
Erick was fired from McDonald's
He always leaves little presents for me
Carol managed to lose some weight thanks to exercising
I need to talk to you about stuff we need for our trip
A prepositional phrase can function either as an adjective or an adverb in the sentence. As an adjective, the prepositional phrase answers the question "Which one?".
The boy with red hair was taking photos outside
Which one? The one with red hair
As an adverb, the prepositional phrase answers the questions "How?/When?/Where?".
Gaby when for a run at 5 o'clock
When did she go for a run? At 5 o'clock
Questions | Answers | |
---|---|---|
a. How long have you been learning italian? | 1. Oh thank you! I got them at our local mall | |
b. When did you wake? | 2. I've been trying to master it for 10 years. | |
c. Where did you buy such a pretty pair of boots? | 3. At 8 o'clock, though it's my day off today. |
–Do you have any plans for tonight?
–Yeah, I'm going on a date with David. I think we're going to a bar or something.
–With whom?
–With David, my colleague. He's a really nice guy! He was transferred from another department about a month ago, and we have so much in common!
–Oh, that's amazing! Let's hang out some other time then.
-Sure!
Choose the correct preposition.
In
/On
a beautiful Thursday morning I found out that I got expelled from
/to
university.
My grandma Judy grew up on
/in
a farm on
/in
Idaho.
Come over
/onto
here! Look at that cute puppy!
Could you pass me that book? - Which one? - The one from
/with
a yellow cover.
My grandparents live in
/off
a tiny house in
/by
the lake.
Stop beating above
/around
the bush! I can't understand anything.
I always see people jogging on
/through
the park.
There was a huge pile with
/of
books under
/into
the desk.
Jenny can't have guests over at her place for
/because of
the landlord.
Ben got sick due
/by
eating junk food all the time.