Prepositions: Be Used To Be Used To + Noun Phrase or Verb-Ing (In
Prepositions: Be Used To Be Used To + Noun Phrase or Verb-Ing (In
Prepositions: Be Used To Be Used To + Noun Phrase or Verb-Ing (In
Frequently, prepositions are used to tell us where one noun is in relation to another (e.g. The
coffee is on the table beside you.) They can also be used to contrast ideas (e.g. We went for a walk
despite the rain.)
Be used to
Be used to + noun phrase or verb-ing (in
this pattern used is an adjective and to is a
preposition).
If you are used to something, you have
often done or experienced it, so it's not
strange, new or difficult for you.
The opposite of be used to is be not used
to.
Get used to
Get used to + noun phrase or verb-ing (in I got used to getting up early in the
this pattern used is an adjective and to is a morning.
preposition).
After a while he didn't mind the noise in the
If you get used to something, you become office - he got used to it.
accustomed to it.
It is the process of becoming used to
something.
Used to
Used to + verb refers to a habit or state in the past. It is used only in the past simple.
Past habits
We used to live there when I was a child.
If you used to do something, you did it for I used to walk to work everyday when I was
a period of time in the past, but you don't do younger.
it any more.
Past states
listen to them.
He used to have long hair but nowadays his
hair is very short.
Uses of Prepositions
Prepositions define direction, time, location, and spatial relationships.
Direction: At the end of the hall, turn to the left.
Time: Weve been working since early this morning.
Location: We saw a movie at the theater.
Space: The dog under the table.
Common Prepositions
Heres a list of some common prepositions:
about, above, across, after, against, along, among, around, at, before, behind, below,
beneath, beside, between, beyond, but, by, despite, down, during, except, for, from, in,
inside, into, like, near, of, off, on, onto, out, outside, over, past, since, through,
throughout, till, to, toward, under, underneath, until, up, upon, with, within, without
Prepositions of place
Prepositions of place show us the position of an object in relation to something else.
Here are some of the most common prepositions of place:
on
under
below
Your shoes are under the chair.
Theres a cupboard under the stairs.
next to
in front of
behind
at the back of
Theres a big garden behind the house.
between
among
Prepositions of direction
Prepositions of direction show us to where or in which direction something moves.
Here are some of the most common:
to
We went to London last week.
He sent a message to his mother.
from
He lives in Canada but hes from New York.
We cycled from Paris to Brussels in five days.
up
The hikers walked up the hill.
down
The ball rolled down the hill.
in, into
He put the money in / into his pocket.
The man fell in / into the river.
out, out of
She took her purse out / out of her bag.
She got out / out of the car and walked to the house.
over
The thief climbed over the fence.
The cat jumped over the wall.
over
The plane flew over London.
under
The cat crawled under the fence.
The secret tunnel ran under the Berlin Wall.
round, around
The walked round / around the other side of the church.
through
They drove through the tunnel.
Water runs through pipes to your house.
Subordinating conjunctions
A subordinating conjunction connects a main (independent) and subordinate
(dependent) clause. The clause beginning with a subordinating conjunction is always
the subordinate clause, which depends on the main clause and cannot exist without it.
Common subordinating conjunctions include:
because, so that, as, since
to express time
to express condition
Correlative conjunctions
Correlative conjunctions are pairs. They connect balanced clauses, phrases or words.
The elements which they connect are usually similar in structure or length.
either . . . or
both . . . and
neither . . . nor
not . . . but
There are not two but three Baltic states: Lithuania, Latvia and
Estonia.
Prepositions of time
in
on
at
years
in 1998, in 2012
months
in January, in February
dates
on 28 June, on 25 October
religious festivals
at Easter, at Christmas
on Monday morning
on Thursday evening
on Friday night
points in time
at the beginning, at the end
of the week
seasons
in spring, in summer, in
autumn, in winter
on
at
forms of transport:
forms of transport:
in a car, in a taxi, in a on a bike, on a bus, on a train,
helicopter
on the metro, on a plane, on a
ship
before nouns referring to a place
or position:
at the top, at the bottom at the
front, at the back at the
beginning, at the end
BUT in the middle
arrive in a city, country:
arrive in London, arrive in
France
at work
at home
at school (also in school)
at college
at university
at the door
at the airport
at the bus/train station
at the end of the road
at the front
at the back
at the top
at the bottom
at the beginning
at the end (BUT in the middle)
good at something
He is good at languages.
Here are some more examples of adjectives and the correct prepositions which follow
them.
Prepositions after adjectives
(un)aware of something
dependent on something
similar to something