Language/English/Grammar/Prepositions-of-Position
With regard to place, in tends to be used with larger or enclosed areas such as cities, countries and tunnels, whereas at tends to be used for smaller places, points on a journey, or for activities typically associated with a place.
E.g.
• The couple will spend their money in London. (large area)
• Their train stops at London Paddington. (point on a journey)
• The boys are running around in the library. (enclosed area)
• They boys are at the library, reading. (reading is associated with libraries)
When talking about heights or levels, you use below, over or under.
E.g.
• The dog is sleeping under the bed.
• The plane flew over the hills.
Take a moment to explore these relevant pages as you conclude this lesson: Contractions, Irregular Verbs, Adverbs of Manner & How Some pointers when using Adjectives.
Sources
Videos
Prepositions of Location - English Grammar - Part 1 - YouTube
Prepositions of PLACE IN / ON / AT / BY Common English Grammar ...
Prepositions in Place Expressions - English Grammar & Speaking ...
Prepositions of place for kids | English Grammar For Kids with ...
Prepositions of place - in, on, at | English grammar - YouTube
Other Lessons
- Mood vs Tense
- CONJUNCTIONS
- Prepositions
- Grammar Gaffes (mistakes, errors)
- That v.s. Which
- Comparison of Adjectives
- ‘Differ with’ and ‘Differ from’
- Since and For
- On: place
- PRONOUNS