Prepositional phrases
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At the minimum, a prepositional phrase will begin with a preposition and end with a noun, pronoun, gerund, or clause, the "object" of the preposition.

The object of the preposition will often have one or more modifiers to describe it. These are the patterns for a prepositional phrase:

preposition + noun, pronoun, gerund, or clause

preposition + modifier(s) + noun, pronoun, gerund, or clause

Here are some examples of the most basic prepositional phrase:

   
 At home  At = preposition; home = noun.
 In time  In = preposition; time = noun.
 From Richie  From = preposition; Richie = noun.
 With me  With = preposition; me = pronoun.
 By singing  By = preposition; singing = gerund.
 About what we need  About = preposition; what we need = noun clause.

Most prepositional phrases are longer, like these:

 From my grandmother  From = preposition; my = modifier; grandmother = noun.
 Under the warm blanket  Under = preposition; the, warm = modifiers; blanket = noun.
 In the weedy, overgrown garden  In = preposition; the, weedy, overgrown = modifiers; garden = noun.
 Along the busy, six-lane highway  Along = preposition; the, busy, six-lane = modifiers; highway = noun.
 By writing furiously  By = preposition; writing = gerund; furiously = modifier.

Understand what prepositional phrases do in a sentence.

A prepositional phrase will function as an adjective or adverb. As an adjective, the prepositional phrase will answer the question Which one?

Read these examples:

The book on the bathroom floor is swollen from shower steam.

Which book? The one on the bathroom floor!

The sweet potatoes in the vegetable bin are green with mold.

Which sweet potatoes? The ones forgotten in the vegetable bin!

The note from Beverly confessed that she had eaten the leftover pizza.

Which note? The one from Beverly!

As an adverb, a prepositional phrase will answer questions such as How? When? or Where?

 

Freddy is stiff from yesterday's long football practice.
How did Freddy get stiff? From yesterday's long football practice!

 

Before class, Josh begged his friends for a pencil.
When did Josh do his begging? Before class!

 

Feeling brave, we tried the Dragon Breath Burritos at Tito's Taco Palace.
Where did we eat the spicy food? At Tito's Taco Palace!
Remember that a prepositional phrase will never contain the subject of a sentence.

 

Sometimes a noun within the prepositional phrase seems the logical subject of a verb. Don't fall for that trick! You will never find a subject in a prepositional phrase. Look at this example:

Neither of these cookbooks contains the recipe for Manhattan-style squid eyeball stew.

Cookbooks do indeed contain recipes. In this sentence, however, cookbooks is part of the prepositional phrase of these cookbooks. Neither-whatever a neither is-is the subject for the verb contains.

Neither is singular, so you need the singular form of the verb, contains. If you incorrectly identified cookbooks as the subject, you might write contain, the plural form, and thus commit a subject-verb agreement error.




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