Prepositions categories¶
Category |
Examples |
Function / Notes |
|---|---|---|
Accompaniment / association |
with, together with, along with |
indicate co-occurrence or company |
Agent / cause (passive) |
by |
indicate agent in a passive construction |
Causal / reason |
because of, due to, on account of |
indicate cause or reason |
Comparative / similarity / contrast |
like, unlike, similar to, as…as, in the same way as, akin to, in contrast to/with |
indicate similarity, comparison, or contrast |
Directional / path |
to, into, onto, toward, from, out of, off |
indicate motion toward/away from a point |
Instrumental / means |
with, by, using |
indicate instrument or means |
Measure / extent |
per, by, in terms of |
indicate measurement, rate, or scope |
Manner / style |
like, in the manner of, in the style of |
indicate manner or fashion |
Purpose / goal |
for, for the sake of, to |
indicate intended purpose |
Condition / concession |
except, aside from, barring |
indicate exception, limitation |
Source / origin |
from, out of, of |
indicate source, provenance, material |
Spatial / locative |
in, on, at, under, over, above, below, behind, between, among, beside, near |
indicate location or place |
Temporal / time |
at, on, in, during, since, for, by, until, from…to… |
indicate time or duration |
Notes on CGEL treatment¶
All these are lexical prepositions (take NP complements).
Multiword prepositions (e.g., because of, in terms of, on account of) are treated as single prepositional units.
Some prepositions can fit multiple categories, depending on context:
I cut with a knife
I went with her
with → instrumental (“I cut it with a knife”) or accompaniment (“I went with her”)
words like this
he swims like a fish
like → comparative (“words like this”) or manner (“he swims like a fish”)