Lesson
11 of 29

📍 Prepositions

Answer-first preposition rules for banking English: at/on/in, between/among, by/with, in/into, objective case, fixed prepositions and common error correction.

Prepositions

Prepositions: Direct Answer for Exams

A preposition is a word placed before a noun or pronoun to show relation: in the bank, on Monday, at 10 AM, with a sickle, between you and me. In banking and government-exam English, most questions test five rules: objective case after a preposition, AT/ON/IN for time and place, zero preposition before next/last/today/tomorrow, no extra preposition after transitive verbs, and fixed prepositions such as married to, superior to, interested in, and different from.

30-Second Search Snippet

Preposition rules: use at for exact point or time, on for surface/day/date, in for enclosed place/month/year/period, between for two or distinct named items, among for more than two, by for agent, with for instrument, in for static position and into for entry. After a preposition, use the objective case: between you and me, not between you and I.

High-Frequency Error Fixes

Incorrect Correct Rule
between you and I between you and me Object after preposition
discuss about the issue discuss the issue Discuss is transitive
enter into the room enter the room Enter is transitive
despite of the delay despite the delay Despite never takes of
on next Monday next Monday Zero preposition
married with her married to her Fixed preposition
superior than him superior to him Latin adjective takes to
cope up with pressure cope with pressure Fixed verb phrase

TIP

Memory line: AT = point, ON = surface/date, IN = area/period, and every preposition wants an object.

1. Definition and Concept

Preposition comes from Pre (before) + Position (placement/arrangement).

It is a word placed before a Noun or Pronoun to show its relationship, arrangement, or position with respect to the rest of the sentence.

Formula:

Noun/Pronoun + Preposition + Noun/Pronoun

Common examples: in, on, at, by, under, over, with, before, after

Types of Prepositions

Type Description Examples
Simple Single-word prepositions in, on, at, by, under, over, with, beside, between, among, through
Adjectival Formed from adjectives, often follow a noun following, including, considering, pending, like, unlike, concerning, near
Complex Word combinations acting as single prepositions according to, in spite of, because of, on behalf of, by means of, in addition to

The Rule of Objective Case

A preposition must always be followed by an Object. This means the Noun or Pronoun following a preposition must be in the Objective Case, not the Subjective Case.

Subjective Case (Doer) Objective Case (Receiver/Object)
I Me
We Us
You You
He Him
She Her
It It
They Them

Examples:

  • ❌ The agriculture officer went to meet she.
  • ✅ The agriculture officer went to meet her. ('Her' is the object of the preposition 'to'*)
  • ❌ The land dispute is between Ramesh and I.
  • ✅ The land dispute is between Ramesh and me. ('Me' is the object of the preposition 'between'*)
  • ✅ The sarpanch sat beside him. (Not beside he)
  • ✅ This subsidy is for us. (Not for we)

Transitive vs. Intransitive Verbs

Not all verbs need a preposition to connect to an object.

  1. Transitive Verbs: Directly take an object. No preposition is needed.

    • Example: "The pests attacked the wheat crop."
      • Attacked (Transitive Verb) \rightarrow the wheat crop (Object). No preposition.
  2. Intransitive Verbs: Cannot take an object directly. They need a preposition.

    • Example: "The agriculture officer went to Varanasi."
      • Went (Intransitive Verb) \rightarrow to (Preposition) \rightarrow Varanasi (Prepositional Object).

2. Preposition vs. Conjunction

It is important to distinguish between prepositions and conjunctions, as they affect subject-verb agreement.

  • Conjunction: Acts as a Joiner. It connects two subjects of equal importance.

    • Example: "Ramesh and Suresh have gone to the cooperative bank."
      • Here, Ramesh and Suresh are joined by and. The subject is plural (Ramesh + Suresh), so we use the plural verb have.
  • Preposition: Shows a Relation. It connects a primary subject with a secondary noun/pronoun (the object).

    • Example: "Ramesh along with Suresh has gone to the cooperative bank."
      • Here, along with is a preposition.
      • Ramesh is the main Subject.
      • Suresh is the Object of the preposition.
      • The verb must agree with the main subject (Ramesh), so we use the singular verb has.

3. Usage: Time and Place (AT, ON, IN)

These three prepositions are often confused. We can understand them through the concepts of Dimension (Space) and Scale (Time).

A. Place (Space & Area)

Preposition Concept Type Visual Hint Examples
AT Point Specific Location 📍 at the mandi gate, at the railway station, at the counter
ON Surface Line/Contact on the table, on the wall, on the platform
IN Volume Enclosed Area 📦 in the godown, in the village, in Lucknow

Special Cases:

  1. Hierarchy of Place:
    • At: Specific Address/Point ("The district collector lives at 5, Civil Lines...").
    • In: Larger Area/Container ("...in Kanpur.").
  2. House:
    • "Meet me at my house." (House as a meeting point).
    • "I am in my house." (Inside the enclosed structure).
    • "The children are playing on the terrace." (Terrace is a surface).
  3. Addresses/Text:
    • "Please check the details on page no. 3." (Page is a surface).

B. Time (Clock, Calendar, Duration)

Preposition Concept Examples
AT Clock Time (Point) at 9 AM, at 4 o'clock, at dawn, at dusk, at night, at noon
ON Day/Date (Calendar) on Monday, on 26th January, on Diwali (day)
IN Period (Duration) in March, in 2024, in summer, in the morning, in the evening

Specific Comparisons:

  • Noon vs Afternoon:
    • At noon (Exact point: 12:00 PM).
    • In the afternoon (Duration of time).
  • Night:
    • At night (General time/Regular). Ex: The watchman patrols the mandi at night.
    • In the night (Specific night/Event). Ex: The fire broke out in the night. Stars sparkled in the clear winter night.

C. Future Time Nuances (After vs In)

Preposition Usage Example
After Later than an event We will announce the results after the final count.
In Period required for action The NABARD officer will submit the report in two days.

4. The "Zero Preposition" Rule for Time

Do NOT use at/on/in before certain time expressions words like today, tomorrow, yesterday, next, last, this, that.

Examples:

  • ❌ Submit the form on next Monday.
  • ✅ Submit the form next Monday.
  • ❌ The kisan mela was held on last Sunday.
  • ✅ The kisan mela was held last Sunday.
  • ❌ The IBPS results will be out on tomorrow.
  • ✅ The IBPS results will be out tomorrow.

5. Salutations and Greetings

Prepositions aren't used in these greetings, but understanding their timestamp is key.

  • Good Morning (Welcoming)
  • Good Noon (12:00 PM - Specific)
  • Good Afternoon (After 12:00 PM - Welcoming)
  • Good Evening (Welcoming)
  • Good Night (Departure/Goodbye)

6. Prepositions of Transport (Travel)

The rule depends on the type of vehicle and whether you can stand/walk inside it.

Vehicle Type Preposition Logic Examples
Public/Large ON Area/Platform (You can walk) on a bus, on a train, on a plane, on a ship
Private/Small IN Enclosed (You sit inside) in a car, in a taxi, in an auto, in a helicopter
Open/2-Wheeler ON Surface (You sit on top) on a bike, on a bicycle, on a horse/camel/donkey/elephant

Exceptions/Notes:

  • "By": Used for the mode of travel generally (by car, by bus, by train) without 'a/an/the'.
    • The NABARD officer travels by jeep to remote blocks. (Mode)
    • She is sitting in the jeep right now. (Location/Position)
  • "On Foot": Always "On foot", never "by foot".

7. Prepositions of Furniture (Chair & Bed)

Whether you use in or on depends on the structure of the furniture.

A. Chair

  • ON a chair: Used for armless chairs or if you sit on the surface (e.g., dining chair, stool).
    • Reason: It is a surface/platform.
  • IN a chair: Used for armchairs or chairs that enclose you.
    • Reason: The arms create an enclosed space.

B. Bed

  • IN the bed: Used for sleeping or resting under covers.
    • Reason: You are effectively inside the bedding.
  • ON the bed: Used for sitting on the surface.
    • Reason: You are just on top of the mattress.

8. Movement: IN vs. INTO

The difference lies in State vs. Motion.

Preposition Concept Diagram Hint Examples
IN Static/State Inside a boundary The farmer is in the field. The bullock is walking in the field (within the boundary).
INTO/INSIDE Motion (Entry) Outside \rightarrow Inside The officer walked into the godown. The fish jumped into the pond.

Transformation (Change of State):

  • Into is used when the medium/form changes (Only 'into', not 'inside').
    • Milk converts into curd through fermentation.
    • Translate this notice into Hindi.

Important Errors:

  • ❌ The patwari entered into the office. (Redundant 'into' with 'enter')
  • ✅ The patwari entered the office.
  • Exception: "Enter into an agreement" is correct.

9. Vertical Position (Over, Under, Above, Below, Beneath)

Preposition Concept Key Logic Examples
OVER Vertically Up Directly above (90°) The irrigation pipe runs over the road.
UNDER Vertically Down Directly below (90°) The seeds are stored under the tarpaulin. The calf rests under the tree.
ABOVE Level Up Higher level (Not necessarily vertical) The Himalayan snowfields lie above the timberline.
BELOW Level Down Lower level Read the instructions given below.
BENEATH Just Below Touching/Hiding underneath The scorpion was hiding beneath the sack of wheat.

Up / Down / Up To:

Preposition Usage Example
Up Upward movement/direction The water level crept up the embankment.
Down Downward movement/direction Floodwater flowed down the slope into the fields.
Up to Limit, maximum extent Crop loans are available for up to five lakh rupees.

Idiomatic Use are exception:

  • I am over the moon about clearing the IBPS PO interview. (Very happy).
  • I am on cloud nine after getting the NABARD appointment letter. (Very happy).

10. Motion and Dimensions (Through, Across, Along, Onto)

Preposition Concept Visual Hint Examples
ONTO / UPON Surface + Movement Jump \rightarrow Surface The sacks were loaded onto the truck. He climbed upon the roof to check for leaks.
THROUGH 3D Movement Entering & Exiting a medium The canal water flows through the pipes. The train passes through the Vindhya tunnel.
ACROSS Side to Side One side \rightarrow Other side The farmer swam across the Ganga during the floods. The village lies across the river.
ALONG Parallel Movement Side-by-side Eucalyptus trees are planted along the canal bank. "Come along with us to the mandi."

Comparison: Across vs Through

  • Across: Movement over a surface (road, field, river).
  • Through: Movement within a 3D space (forest, tunnel, crop rows).

11. Distribution (Between, Among, Amidst)

Preposition Rule Condition Examples
BETWEEN Two Entities Specific / Distinct Names The dispute is between Ramesh and Suresh over the field boundary. A pact between India and Sri Lanka on fisheries.
Note: Followed by AND, not 'to'.
AMONG More than Two Consonant Sound Distribute the seed kits among the farmers.
AMONGST More than Two Vowel Sound Divide the compensation amongst all affected families.
AMID / AMIDST Uncountable Abstract Nouns The sarpanch stayed calm amidst the chaos of the flood relief camp.

Important Rules for "Between":

  • Objective Case: Always use objective pronouns.
    • ❌ Between Ramesh and I.
    • ✅ Between Ramesh and me.
  • Each/Every: Do not use 'Between' with 'each' or 'every' unless connected to 'the next'.
    • ❌ Between each row.
    • ✅ Between each row and the next.
  • Distinct Names > 2: You can use "Between" for more than two items if they are distinct and named.
    • There is a tripartite agreement between India, Nepal, and Bhutan on river water sharing.

12. Agency vs. Instrument (By vs. With)

Use this rule for Passive Voice or indicating how an action is done.

Preposition Used For Logic Examples
BY Doer / Agent Living Thing The field was surveyed by the patwari. The report was prepared by her.
WITH Instrument / Tool Non-Living Thing The farmer cut the sugarcane with a sickle. The carpenter nailed the crate with a hammer.

13. Time Nuances

A. On Time vs. In Time

Phrase Meaning Logic Examples
ON Time Exact Time Punctual (Scheduled dot) The IBPS exam started on time (at exactly 10:00 AM).
IN Time Before Time Early / With margin Reach the exam centre in time (well before the gates close).

B. By / Within / Until

Preposition Meaning Example
BY Deadline (At or Before) Submit the crop insurance form by 31st October.
WITHIN Duration (Inside limit) The bank will disburse the loan within seven working days.
UNTIL Duration (Up to point) The procurement centre will remain open until 5 PM.

C. For vs. Since vs. From

Preposition Usage (Tense) Example
For Duration (Perfect/Perfect Continuous) The farmer has been waiting for his compensation for three months.
Since Starting point (Perfect/Perfect Continuous) The village has not received rainfall since June.
From Starting point (Future/General events) The new fertiliser subsidy scheme will be in effect from April to March.

14. Important Confusions (Tree, Foot, Watch)

  1. Tree (Shade vs Under):
    • IN the shade of a tree. (Shade creates a covered area/room).
    • UNDER the tree. (Directly below the branches vertically).
    • Example: "The farmers rested in the shade of the peepal tree." but "They sat under the mango tree."
  2. Time by Instrument:
    • BY your watch. (Watch is an instrument/measuring tool).
    • Example: "What is the time by your watch?" (Not 'in' your watch).

15. Concession (Despite vs. In Spite Of)

Both mean the same thing (Ke Bavajood), but their grammar differs.

  • Rule 1: In Spite is always followed by OF.
  • Rule 2: Despite is NEVER followed by of.

Structure:

Despite / In spite of + (V1+ing / Noun / "the fact that")

Examples:

  • Despite of the drought, the farmer did not leave his land. (Wrong)
  • Despite the drought, the farmer did not leave his land.
  • In spite of the drought, the farmer did not leave his land.

16. Common Errors with Verbs (Transitive Nature)

Certain verbs are Transitive and do NOT take a preposition when used in Active Voice.

A. No Preposition Required at all

Do not use on, about, of, with, into after these verbs:

Verb Common Error (Don't Use) Correct Usage
Attack attacked on The locusts attacked the standing crop.
Emphasize emphasized on The agriculture secretary emphasized the need for drip irrigation.
Stress stress on The NABARD report stressed the importance of micro-credit.
Discuss discuss about Let's discuss the new MSP policy.
Describe describe about The farmer described the extent of crop damage.
Comprise comprise of The cooperative comprises twelve villages.
Enter enter into The procurement officer entered the godown. (Exception: "Enter into an agreement" is correct)
Cope cope up with The small farmers could not cope with the drought. (Never cope up with)
Sign sign on Please sign the loan agreement.
Invade invade in The wild elephants invaded the paddy fields.
Crave crave for She craves recognition for her work in rural finance.
Lack lack of The aspirant lacked confidence in the interview. (Verb = No prep). Noun Exception: There was a lack OF irrigation water.
Ask ask to The officer asked the farmer.
Advise advise to The krishi vigyan kendra advised the farmers.
Encourage encourage to The block officer encouraged the women's self-help group.
Order order to The district magistrate ordered the procurement team.

B. Verbs Taking "TO" with Person

Some verbs require TO when connecting to a person (object), unlike "told" or "asked".

Verbs: Suggest, Propose, Report, Reply, Explain, Complain, Listen, Pray.

  • The cooperative chairman suggested me.
  • ✅ The cooperative chairman suggested to me that we increase the procurement target.
  • ✅ The farmer complained to the district collector about the delay.
  • ✅ The field officer explained to us the new subsidy scheme.

17. Superfluous Expressions (Double Usage)

Avoid using linking words that repeat the same meaning.

  • As / Since / Because ... should NOT be followed by So / Therefore.

    • As the rains failed, so the kharif crop was lost.
    • As the rains failed, the kharif crop was lost.
    • Since the river flooded, I stayed at the relief camp. (Not Since... so...)
  • Suddenly + Come Across

    • "Come across" means to meet suddenly. Using "Suddenly" with it is redundant.
    • The field officer suddenly came across an old irrigation map.
    • ✅ The field officer came across an old irrigation map.

18. Fixed Prepositions (Specific Usage)

A. Angry / Annoyed

  • With a Person (Living).

  • At a Thing (Behavior/Action).

  • The NABARD officer was angry with the contractor.

  • The NABARD officer was angry at the contractor's delay.

B. Made Of vs. Made From

  • Made OF: Physical Change (Reversible / Material is visible).
    • The village granary is made of bamboo and clay.
  • Made FROM: Chemical Change (Irreversible / Material changes form).
    • Ethanol is made from sugarcane.

C. Die (Cause of Death)

Preposition Cause Example
Die OF Disease The cattle died of foot-and-mouth disease.
Die FROM Reason (External) Several labourers died from heatstroke in the fields.
Die IN Event Two farmers died in the irrigation canal accident.

D. Adhere (Compliance)

  • Adhere TO: To stick to or follow a rule/guideline.

19. The Gerund Rule (Preposition + V1+ing)

As a general rule, a Preposition is followed by a Gerund (Verb + ing).

  • She is good at managing the cooperative accounts.
  • The officer apologized for arriving late to the village meeting.

Exception: "To" + V1+ing

Usually, "To" takes the Infinitive (To go). However, in certain fixed phrases, "To" is a preposition and takes V1+ing.

Phrases: Accustomed to, Looking forward to, Addicted to, Habituated to, Dedicated to, With a view to, Prone to, Given to.

  • ✅ I look forward to meeting the NABARD district development manager.
  • ✅ She is addicted to reading current affairs every morning.

20. Adjectives and Comparison

Latin Adjectives (-ior)

Adjectives ending in -ior (Senior, Junior, Superior, Inferior) take TO instead of than.

  • ✅ The district agriculture officer is senior to the block officer.

Prefer / Preferable

  • Also takes TO.
  • Many farmers prefer organic farming to chemical-intensive methods.

21. Home as an Adverb

Do NOT use a preposition (to/at/in) before "Home" when used with verbs of motion (Go, Arrive, Reach, Get, Send).

  • The farmer went to home after the mandi closed.
  • ✅ The farmer went home after the mandi closed.
  • ✅ The FCI officer arrived home late after the procurement drive.

Exception: If a possessive adjective (my, your, his) is used, then use a preposition.

  • ✅ She went to her home in the village.

22. Due to vs. Owing to

  • Owing to: Starts a sentence (Reason).
    • Owing to the unseasonal hailstorm, the wheat crop suffered heavy damage.
  • Due to: Follows a linking verb (is/am/was/were).
    • ✅ The crop failure was due to the unseasonal hailstorm.

23. Passive Voice Exceptions (Fixed Preps)

In Passive Voice, distinct prepositions replace "By".

Word Preposition Example
Known TO The NABARD scheme is known to all farmers in the district.
Married TO She is married to a block development officer.
Satisfied WITH The district collector was satisfied with the relief work.
Annoyed AT / WITH The farmer was annoyed at the delay in payment.
Interested IN She is interested in rural banking and microfinance.

24. Distinct Prepositions (The "AND" Rule)

When two adjectives or verbs connected by AND require different prepositions, mention BOTH explicitly.

  • The new scheme is beneficial and relevant to farmers.
  • ✅ The new scheme is beneficial for and relevant to farmers.

Additional Reference: Making Sense of Prepositions

Core Meanings (A-Z Quick Dictionary)

Preposition Core Concepts Examples
ABOUT Approximation, Concerning, Imminent at about 3 o'clock; talk about MSP; about to harvest.
ABOVE Higher (no contact), Superiority above the flood level; above the rank of SO.
AFTER Following (time/order), Pursuit after the kharif harvest; run after the thief.
AGAINST Opposition, Contact (leaning) protest against the policy; leaning against the wall.
AT Specific Point (Time/Place), Rate, Target at 9 AM; at the mandi; at ₹2,000/quintal; smile at him.
BEFORE Earlier than, In front of (formal) before the deadline; stand before the magistrate.
BEHIND At back of, Late/Lagging behind the warehouse; behind schedule.
BEYOND Further than, Outside scope beyond the district boundary; beyond understanding.
BY Near, Deadline, Agent, Means sit by me; by March 31; written by the officer; by train.
FOR Purpose, Duration, Recipient for irrigation; for three seasons; for the kisan.
FROM Origin, Source, Separation from Punjab; from April to June; different from.
IN Inside (Volume), General Time in the godown; in 2024; in the morning.
INTO Movement -> Inside, Change walk into the field; turn into ice.
OF Possession, Material, Partitive leg of the irrigation channel; bag of wheat; member of the panchayat.
OFF Separation, Disconnection take off the shelf; turn off the pump; fall off the tractor.
ON Surface, Day/Date, Topic on the terrace; on Tuesday; report on soil health.
ONTO Movement -> Surface Loaded the grain sacks onto the truck.
OVER Vertically Above, Covering over the canal; tarpaulin over the grain.
THROUGH Movement (3D), Means through the wheat fields; through hard work.
TO Destination, Direction go to the mandi; give to the kisan.
TOWARDS Direction (General) walk towards the village.
UNDER Vertically Below under the tree.
WITH Instrument, Together cut with sickle; come with me.
WITHOUT Lacking/Excluding farming without irrigation is risky.

Common Prepositional Phrases

Learning these as "chunks" helps in fluency.

  • In front of: Positioned ahead. (The harvester was parked in front of the godown.)
  • In case of: In the event of. (In case of crop failure, claim insurance.)
  • In spite of: Despite. (In spite of the drought, the farmers sowed again.)
  • Because of / On account of / Owing to: Due to. (Cancelled on account of rain.)
  • On behalf of: Representing. (The sarpanch spoke on behalf of the village.)
  • In order to: With the purpose of. (Farmers irrigate in order to improve yield.)
  • With reference to: Regarding. (With reference to your crop loan application...)
  • According to: Based on source. (According to the IMD forecast, rains are expected this week.)
  • In addition to: Besides. (In addition to wheat, this district grows mustard.)
  • For the sake of: For the benefit of. (For the sake of food security, MSP must be maintained.)

Dependent Prepositions with Nouns & Verbs

Some words are "married" to specific prepositions.

Nouns + Preposition

  • Knowledge OF: The officer has knowledge of soil health management.
  • Trouble WITH: The trouble with this irrigation pump...
  • Inquiry INTO: An inquiry into the irregularities in crop insurance.
  • Attempt AT: An attempt at improving rural credit flow.

Verbs + Preposition

  • Agree WITH (Person) / ON (Point) / TO (Proposal).
  • Apply FOR (Job) / TO (Person).
  • Argue WITH (Person) / FOR or AGAINST (Topic).
  • Belong TO: This agricultural land belongs to the cooperative.
  • Consist OF: The NABARD team consists of 8 officers.
  • Deal IN (Business) / WITH (Handle issue). (He deals in paddy. Deal with the grievance.)
  • Depend ON: The kharif harvest depends on the monsoon.
  • Insist ON: The district collector insisted on timely payment of MSP.
  • Listen TO: Listen to the krishi vigyan kendra's advice.
  • Provide FOR (Support) / With (Supply). (Provide for the family. Provide the village with clean water.)
  • Wait FOR (Person) / ON (Serve). (Wait for the officer. The attendant waits on the guests.)

Quick Reference: Common Mistakes Table

Error Type ❌ Incorrect ✅ Correct
Discuss Discuss about the MSP policy Discuss the MSP policy
Enter Enter into the procurement centre Enter the procurement centre
Despite Despite of the drought Despite the drought
Comprise Comprise of Comprise (or Consist of)
Await Await for the relief funds Await the relief funds (or Wait for)
Cope Cope up with Cope with
Sign Sign on the agreement Sign the agreement
Home Go to home Go home
Time On next Monday Next Monday
Marriage Married with him Married to him
Superior Superior than Superior to
Benefit Beneficial for Beneficial to

This lesson consolidates fundamental rules, confusing pairs, and advanced usage to give you a complete command over prepositions.

Summary Cheat Sheet

Concept / Topic Key Details / Explanation
Definition Preposition placed BEFORE noun/pronoun to show relationship. Always followed by objective case (me, him, her, us, them)
Types Simple (in, on, at); Adjectival (like, near); Complex (in spite of, according to)
Preposition vs Conjunction Conjunction joins equals (Ram and Shyam have); Preposition shows relation — verb agrees with FIRST subject ("Shyam along with his friends is going")
AT / ON / IN — Place AT = point (at the mandi gate); ON = surface (on the terrace); IN = volume/enclosed (in the godown)
AT / ON / IN — Time AT = clock time (at 9 AM, at night); ON = day/date (on Monday); IN = period (in April, in winter, in the morning)
Zero Preposition Do NOT use at/on/in before: today, tomorrow, yesterday, next, last, this, that — "Submit by next Monday" (not "on next Monday")
Transport ON public/large (bus, train, plane); IN private/small (car, taxi); ON open/2-wheeler (bike, horse)
"By" Mode of travel — no article: "go by train" (not "by the train")
On foot Always "on foot" — never "by foot"
Chair/Bed ON armless chair; IN armchair (enclosed). IN the bed (sleeping); ON the bed (sitting)
IN vs INTO IN = static/state (already inside); INTO = motion/entry (moving from outside to inside)
Enter Never "enter into the room" — just "enter the room". Exception: "enter into an agreement"
Transformation Use into (not inside): "milk converts into curd"; "translate into Hindi"
OVER vs ABOVE Over = vertically above (90°); Above = higher level (not necessarily vertical)
UNDER vs BELOW vs BENEATH Under = directly below; Below = lower level; Beneath = touching/hiding underneath
THROUGH vs ACROSS Through = 3D movement within (forest, tunnel); Across = side-to-side over a surface (river, road)
BETWEEN vs AMONG vs AMIDST Between = two distinct named entities (followed by and); Among = 3+ countable; Amidst = uncountable/abstract
BY vs WITH By = doer/agent (living); With = instrument/tool (non-living)
On time vs In time On time = exactly punctual; In time = before deadline/with margin
By / Within / Until By = deadline (at or before); Within = inside a duration; Until = up to a point in time
For / Since / From For = duration; Since = starting point (perfect tenses); From = starting point (future/general)
Despite vs In Spite Of Despite is NEVER followed by "of"; In spite is ALWAYS followed by "of"
Verbs needing NO preposition attack, emphasize, stress, discuss, describe, comprise, enter (room), cope (with, not "up with"), lack, crave, sign
Verbs needing TO (for person) suggest, propose, report, reply, explain, complain, listen, pray — "He explained to the farmers"
Angry with/at Angry with a person; Angry at a thing/behaviour
Made of vs Made from Made of = physical/reversible (granary of bamboo); Made from = chemical/irreversible (ethanol from sugarcane)
Die of / from / in Die of disease (foot-and-mouth); Die from external cause (heatstroke, wound); Die in event (accident)
Gerund after preposition Preposition + V1+ing: "good at managing". Fixed phrases with "to": "look forward to meeting", "addicted to reading"
Latin adjectives (-ior) Senior, Junior, Superior, Inferior take to (not than)
Home No preposition with motion verbs: "go home", "arrive home". Add preposition only with possessive: "go to my home"
Due to vs Owing to Due to follows a linking verb (was due to); Owing to starts a sentence (Owing to the drought,...)
As vs Because/So Do NOT pair As/Since/Because with So/Therefore — use one or the other
Common errors Discuss about, Enter into (room), Despite of, Comprise of, Cope up with, Go to home, Superior than, Married with — all incorrect

Lesson Doubts

Ask questions, get expert answers