Prepositional Verbs
Prepositional verbs are a group of multi-word verbs
made from a verb plus another word or words. Many people
refer to all multi-word verbs as phrasal verbs. On these
pages we make a distinction between three types of multi-word
verbs: prepositional verbs, phrasal verbs and phrasal-prepositional
verbs. On this page we look at prepositional verbs.
Prepositional verbs are made of:
verb + preposition
Because a preposition always has an object, all prepositional
verbs have direct objects. Here are some examples of
prepositional verbs:
| prepositional verbs |
meaning |
examples |
| |
direct object |
| believe in |
have faith in the existence of |
I believe in |
God. |
| look after |
take care of |
He is looking after |
the dog. |
| talk about |
discuss |
Did you talk about |
me? |
| wait for |
await |
John is waiting for |
Mary. |
Prepositional verbs cannot be separated. That means
that we cannot put the direct object between the two
parts. For example, we must say "look after the baby".
We cannot say "look the baby after":
| prepositional verbs
are
inseparable |
 |
Who is looking after the baby? |
This is possible. |
 |
Who is looking
the baby after? |
This is not possible. |
 |
It is a good idea to write
"something/somebody" in your vocabulary
book when you learn a new prepositional
verb, like this:
- believe in
something/somebody
- look after
sthg/sby
This reminds you that this verb
needs a direct object (and where to
put it). |
|
Phrasal-prepositional
Verbs >>
|