Preposition
In grammar, a preposition is a word that establishes a relationship between what is called its object (usually a noun phrase), and some other part of the sentence.Examples (with the preposition highlighted):
- My coat is on the sofa.
- I knitted throughout the day.
- They will not be finished until lunchtime.
- The keys are between the cushions.
- A man hid behind the door.
Although the canonical object of a preposition is a noun phrase, there are cases in which another kind of phrase forms a prepositions object. For instance, in the sentence "Come out from under the bed", the object of the preposition from is another prepositional phrase, under the bed. Furthermore, according to some analyses, in the sentence "I opened the door before he walked in", before is not a conjunction but rather a preposition whose object is a full sentence (he walked in).
In English usage, traditionalists often argue that, since prepositions are usually meant to come before the words they modify, one should not end a sentence with a preposition. Following this guideline implicitly, however, can make a sentence become unnecessarily complicated. Compare, "The table I’d like to sit at", with "The table at which I’d like to sit".
Some languages, such as Japanese, place prepositions after the noun and thus have what are called postpositions. In some inflected languages, prepositions are not separate words; their function is instead performed by a system of inflections on nouns called cases or declension.