Predicative complements
Prepositional phrases also act as predicative complements, most typically of
place:
I was
at the office all day.
Just put it
on my desk, please.
Postmodifiers and complements
Prepositional phrases act as postmodifiers or as complements in noun phrases (in
green):
That guy
in the pub last night
was getting on my nerves.
(postmodifier)
It was in
the shape
of a triangle
.
(complement)
They also act as postmodifiers and complements in adjective and adverb phrases
(in green):
She’s
quite tall
for a five-year-old
, isn’t she?
(postmodifier)
Both brothers were
good
at football
.
(complement)
He performed quite
well
on the whole
.
(postmodifier)
Luckily
for me
there was another train just half an hour later.
(postmodifier)
Premodifiers
Numerals may be premodified by a prepositional phrase:
Children of
under fourteen
years of age will not be admitted.
It’ll cost
just over two hundred
pounds.
Preposition stranding
257
A preposition is described as stranded when it is separated from its complement:
complement preposition
What was she referring to?
(preposition stranding)
prep + comp
To what was she referring?
(more formal, without preposition stranding)
In traditional style guides, advice is often given never to end a sentence with a preposition,
meaning that prepositions should not be stranded. However, the situation concerning the
usage of prepositions is rather more complex than such advice suggests.
468 | Prepositions and prepositional phrases
Cambridge Grammar of English
Preposition stranding occurs in the following main structures:
Who did you talk
to?
(wh-interrogatives)
I need someone to go
with.
(relative clauses)
It’s the only garage which we have any confidence
in.
(relative clauses)
Tell me what they are so afraid
of.
(indirect wh-interrogatives)
It’s being looked
into.
(passives)
It’s too slippery to walk
on.
(infinitive complements)
Preposition stranding is common in informal styles. In formal structures, prepositions tend
to occur with their complements:
He is the officer we’d been talking
with.
(informal)
He is the officer
with whom we’d been talking.
(formal)
Which building was the smoke coming
out of ?
(informal)
Out of which building was the smoke coming?
(formal)
When a prepositional phrase is the complement of a verb (
went to the match in the example
below), the stranded preposition may occur before or after the prepositional phrase:
He’s the friend I went
to the match
with last Wednesday.
(or: He’s the friend I went with
to the match
last Wednesday
.)
If the context allows for ellipsis, a reduced wh-question may consist simply of a wh-word +
stranded preposition:
A: We’re going on holiday next week.
B: Oh, where to?
A: I’ve got to buy a birthday card.
B: Oh yeah. Who for?
When the meaning is obvious from the text, stranded prepositions of place may occasionally
be omitted, especially in informal conversation:
A: Do you like Tokyo?
B: Yes, it’s a very safe place to live.
(understood: Yes, it’s a very safe place to live in.)
A: I’m going out tonight.
B: Oh yeah, where?
(understood: Where to?)
Some prepositions, including frequent prepositions such as during and since, resist
stranding:
During which of the terms did it happen, spring or autumn?
(preferred to: Which of the terms did it happen during?)
Since when has the train service stopped?
(When has the train service stopped since?)
Û
also 472–475 Word order and focus; 94 Ellipsis
A–Z
5 About; 6 Above; 7 According to; 10 After, afterwards; 11 Against; 21 At;
24
Before; 26
Between, among; 32
Down; 33
During; 43
For; 55
Of;
63 Over; 79 With
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