Home of English Grammar

Grammar Guide
  • Home
  • Exercises
  • Rules
  • Test Yourself
  • Tools
    • Grammar Checker
    • Very Replacer
    • Word Counter
  • Top Social Media Posts
  • Vocabulary
  • Writing Guides
  • Contact
You are here: Home / Verbs / Verbs with prepositions and particles

Verbs with prepositions and particles

March 17, 2011 - pdf

Most English verbs can be followed by prepositions or adverb particles. Examples are: switch off, turn down, walk down, look at, stare at, sit down etc.

  • Please sit down.
  • Can you switch off the light?
  • Why are you staring at me?
  • I saw Alan as I was driving down the street.
  • She ran into the room crying.
  • John fell off the ladder and broke his arm.

Some verbs and prepositions/particles are always used together. Examples are: look at, stare at, throw at, listen to, switch off etc. These combinations are often called phrasal verbs. Note that the meaning of a phrasal verb is sometimes very different from the meanings of the two parts taken separately.

  • The meeting has been put off. (= The meeting has been postponed.) (The meaning of put off is not the same as the meanings of put and off.)

Verbs with prepositions and particles together

A few verbs can be used with both an adverb particle and a preposition. Examples are: put up with, get on with and look out for.

  • I can’t put up with her.

Word order

When prepositions are used with verbs, they usually go before objects.

  • He fell off the ladder. (NOT He fell the ladder off.)

Adverb particles can go before or after noun objects.

  • She switched off the heating. OR She switched the heating off.

Note that particles always go after pronoun objects.

  • She switched it off. (NOT She switched off it.)
  • Share
  • Post
  • Post
  • Email
2,485,429 
735,807 

Grammar Checker

GrammarCheck.net - Try online
Hint → Bookmark GrammarCheck for future use.

Latest Posts

  • 100 Words to Use Instead of “Apologize” February 5, 2026
  • 100 Other Words for “In Addition” February 5, 2026
  • 100 Phrases to Stop Saying at Work February 5, 2026
  • 100 Other Words for “Impact” February 5, 2026
  • 100 Words to Use Instead of “Sorry” February 5, 2026
  • 100 Other Words for “I Am” February 5, 2026
  • 100 Words to Use Instead of “Regards” February 5, 2026

Copyright © 2026 · EnglishGrammar.org
Disclaimer · Privacy Policy · Sitemap