Prepositional Phrases
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Prepositional Phrases
In a sentence prepositions show the relation of one word to another word. Prepositions require an object to complete them, typically a noun or a pronoun. A preposition and its object is called a prepositional phrase.
The Prepositional Phrase: If a word in the table below does not have an object, then the word is not functioning as a preposition.
Prepositions do not change form.
Prepositions are not without evaluation challenges. For instance, a preposition paired with a verb is called a phrasal verb, a preposition can follow, rather than precede its object.
The words below can be used as a preposition in a prepositional phrase.
about above according to across after against along amid among around at atop because of before behind
below beneath beside between beyond but (meaning except) by concerning down during except for from in inside
in spite of instead of into like near of off on on account of onto out out of outside over past
regarding since through throughout to toward under underneath until up upon with within without
The words above can be used as prepositions. In order for one of these words to be considered a preposition, it must be part of a prepositional phrase. Here are some examples of a prepositional phrase:
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over the hill behind the door at Mary's house without your coat during lunch atop Mount Everest
Notice that the prepositional phrase contains no verbs. Generally, they contain an adjective, a noun or pronoun and they can also contain a gerund. The noun or pronoun is the object of the preposition. Prepositional phrases can also contain conjunctions to join two nouns or pronouns as in this example:
underneath sand and rock
The advantage of being able to recognize prepositional phrases in sentences is that neither the subject nor the verb will ever be a part of the prepositional phrase. Consider this sentence: "The coat on the chair is mine." If we eliminate the prepositional phrase, "on the chair" then we can easily see that coat is the subject and is is the verb. "The coat on the chair is mine."
Using the list of prepositions or our memory, we would make up phrases for the words such as:
after the fall behind my chair beyond the sunset amid the crowd
................
................
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