Confusing Prepositions in English: The Ultimate Comparison

Confusing Prepositions in English: The Ultimate Comparison

Why Prepositions Are So Confusing

Prepositions are confusing for three main reasons. First, one preposition can have many different uses. Second, two different prepositions can sometimes seem to mean the same thing. Third, the rules change depending on the situation โ€” time, place, transport, buildings, and more.

For example:

  • She is in the car. โœ… but She is on the bus. โœ…
  • I’ll finish by Friday. โœ… but I’ll work until Friday. โœ…
  • The lamp is over the table. โœ… but The sign is above the door. โœ…

Both sentences in each pair are correct โ€” but the preposition changes. Why? That is exactly what we will explain today.

[LINK TO RELATED POST: Prepositions of Time in English โ€” Complete Guide]


COMPARISON 1: IN vs. ON vs. AT

These three are the most confusing prepositions in English โ€” for both time and place. Let’s compare them in every situation.


IN vs. ON vs. AT โ€” For TIME

Time ExpressionPrepositionExample
YearsINin 2024
MonthsINin March
SeasonsINin summer
Centuries / DecadesINin the 1990s / in the 19th century
Morning / Afternoon / EveningINin the morning
Days of the weekONon Monday
Specific datesONon July 4th
Special occasionsONon Christmas Day / on my birthday
Day + part of dayONon Monday morning
Clock timesATat 6 PM / at 9:30
Noon / Midnight / DawnATat noon / at midnight
NightATat night
Specific momentsATat that moment / at the same time
The weekendAT (BrE) / ON (AmE)at the weekend / on the weekend

Memory Rule:

๐Ÿ—“๏ธ IN = big period โ†’ ๐Ÿ“… ON = specific day โ†’ โฐ AT = exact clock time


IN vs. ON vs. AT โ€” For PLACE

Place SituationPrepositionExample
Inside a roomINin the kitchen / in the bedroom
Inside a buildingINin the hospital / in the office
Inside a cityINin London / in New York
Inside a countryINin France / in Japan
Inside a private vehicleINin the car / in a taxi
On a flat surfaceONon the table / on the floor
On a vertical surfaceONon the wall / on the door
On a named streetONon Baker Street / on Main Road
On a floor numberONon the 3rd floor
On an islandONon Bali / on a small island
On public transportONon the bus / on the train / on the plane
At a specific locationATat the station / at the airport
At a specific eventATat the party / at a concert
At someone’s home or workATat home / at work
At an address numberATat 42 Park Lane
At a point on a journeyATstop at the corner / at the traffic lights

IN vs. ON vs. AT โ€” For BUILDINGS (The Trickiest Part!)

The same building can use different prepositions depending on meaning. This is what confuses most students.

SituationExampleMeaning
in the hospitalHe is in the hospital.He is a patient / physically inside
at the hospitalShe is at the hospital.She is there (visiting someone)
in schoolThe children are in school.They are studying (attending)
at schoolShe is at school.She is at that location
in the officeHe is in the office.He is physically inside the room
at the officeShe works at the office.General location / workplace
in the shopI saw her in the shop.Inside the shop
at the shopMeet me at the shop.At that location / outside or inside
in the houseThe kids are in the house.Physically inside the building
at homeShe is at home.General โ€” she is home

The Key Difference:

  • IN a building = you are physically inside the building
  • AT a building = you are at that location (could be inside or just there)

IN vs. ON vs. AT โ€” The ONE-SENTENCE Memory Trick

“I live in London, on Baker Street, at number 221B.”

This one sentence shows the perfect order โ€” from the biggest area to the smallest point. Memorize it!


COMPARISON 2: FOR vs. SINCE

This is the second most common area of confusion among students.

FORSINCE
AnswersHow long? (duration)From when? (starting point)
Followed byA period of timeA specific point in time
Think of it asA measuring tape (length)An arrow pointing back to a moment
Examplesfor 3 yearssince 2020
for two hourssince Monday
for a long timesince last summer
for six monthssince I was a child
for agessince the accident
Tense used withAny tenseAlmost always present perfect

Side-by-side sentence comparisons:

FORSINCE
I have studied English for 3 years.I have studied English since 2021.
She has waited for an hour.She has waited since noon.
He has lived here for a long time.He has lived here since he was a child.
We haven’t spoken for weeks.We haven’t spoken since the argument.

Memory Trick ๐Ÿง 

  • FOR = Fixed length of time (how long = a fixed measurement)
  • SINCE = Starting point (S for Start)

Quick Test:

  1. She has been a teacher _____ fifteen years.
  2. She has been a teacher _____ 2009.

Answers: 1. for | 2. since


COMPARISON 3: BY vs. UNTIL

Students mix these up constantly. However, they mean very different things.

BYUNTIL / TILL
MeaningNo later than (deadline)Continuously up to that point
Action typeA single completed actionAn ongoing, continuing action
Think of it asA finish lineA road that ends at a point
Question it answersWhen must it be done?How long does it continue?

Side-by-side comparisons:

BY (deadline)UNTIL (continuing)
Finish the report by Friday.Work on the report until Friday.
I need the answer by 5 PM.I will wait until 5 PM.
She wants it done by tomorrow.She worked until midnight.
Pay by the end of the month.They stayed until the end of the party.

The Simplest Test: Ask yourself โ€” does the action keep going until that time?

  • YES โ†’ use UNTIL (I will wait until 6 PM โ€” waiting continues)
  • NO โ†’ use BY (I need this by 6 PM โ€” it must be done before then)

Common Mistake:

  • โŒ I will finish until Friday. โ†’ This says you will keep finishing until Friday โ€” that makes no sense!
  • โœ… I will finish by Friday. โ†’ The work will be completed before or on Friday. โœ…

COMPARISON 4: ABOVE vs. OVER

Both mean higher than something. However, they are used differently.

ABOVEOVER
Basic meaningHigher than, not directly on topDirectly above, or covering
Physical contact?NoSometimes yes (covering)
Used forLevels, measurements, positionDirectly on top, spanning, covering

Side-by-side comparisons:

ABOVEOVER
The sign is above the door.The lamp hangs over the table.
Temperature above 30ยฐShe put a blanket over the child.
Her score is above average.The plane flew over the city.
The clouds were above us.There is a bridge over the river.
Write your name above the line.He held an umbrella over her.

When both work: In many situations, both above and over are acceptable.

  • The helicopter flew above/over the building. โœ…

When only one works:

  • Covering โ†’ only OVER: She put a sheet over the furniture. (not above)
  • Measurements/levels โ†’ only ABOVE: Temperature above zero. (not over zero)

Memory Trick ๐Ÿง 

  • OVER = covering or crossing (think: a bridge over a river, a blanket over a body)
  • ABOVE = just higher up (think: a sign above a door โ€” not covering it)

COMPARISON 5: UNDER vs. BELOW vs. BENEATH

All three mean lower than something. However, each has a specific use.

UNDERBELOWBENEATH
StyleEveryday, most commonFor levels and measurementsFormal or literary
PositionDirectly below, closeLower level (not necessarily directly below)Directly below (poetic/formal)
Used forObjects, furniture, clothingFloors, temperatures, levels, scoresLiterary writing, formal texts

Side-by-side comparisons:

UNDERBELOWBENEATH
The cat is under the table.His flat is below mine.She felt sand beneath her feet.
Put it under your seat.Temperature below zero.Beneath the surface lay secrets.
She wore a vest under her shirt.Sign below the line.He sat beneath the old oak tree.
There is a tunnel under the road.The valley is below the peak.The truth lay beneath his words.

Simple Rule:

  • Everyday objects and furniture โ†’ UNDER (under the bed, under the table)
  • Levels, temperatures, floors โ†’ BELOW (below zero, below average, floor below)
  • Formal or literary writing โ†’ BENEATH (beneath the stars, beneath the surface)

COMPARISON 6: BETWEEN vs. AMONG

This is a clear and simple comparison. However, students still confuse them.

BETWEENAMONG
Used withTwo things (specific)Many things (a group)
Things areClearly separate and distinctPart of a larger group or crowd
Think of it asIn the middle of twoSurrounded by many

Side-by-side comparisons:

BETWEEN (two)AMONG (many)
She sat between Tom and Sara.She sat among her classmates.
The bank is between the cafรฉ and the pharmacy.The house was hidden among the trees.
He divided the cake between the two children.He shared the food among all the students.
There is a wall between the two gardens.She found the letter among old papers.
A secret between you and me.He was among the best players.

Exception โ€” BETWEEN with more than two: When the things are separate and individual (even if there are more than two), use between.

  • There is a border between France, Spain, and Portugal. โœ… (Each country is separate and distinct โ€” so between works here)

COMPARISON 7: IN FRONT OF vs. OPPOSITE vs. FACING

These three all relate to things being in front of each other. However, they mean different things.

IN FRONT OFOPPOSITEFACING
MeaningAhead of, beforeOn the other side, facing acrossTurned towards
DistanceCould be close or at a distanceImplies across a space (road, table)Turned in direction of

Side-by-side comparisons:

IN FRONT OFOPPOSITEFACING
She stood in front of the mirror.The cafรฉ is opposite the bank.She was facing the door.
He parked in front of the school.He sat opposite me at the table.The house is facing the sea.
There is a fountain in front of the palace.The hotel is opposite the station.Turn facing north.

COMPARISON 8: NEXT TO vs. BESIDE vs. BY

All three mean at the side of. However, there are small differences in use and formality.

NEXT TOBESIDEBY
FormalityInformal / everydaySlightly formalNeutral
MeaningImmediately at the sideAt the side (formal)Close to, right next to
Best used forEveryday conversationFormal or written EnglishLocations, positions

Side-by-side comparisons:

NEXT TOBESIDEBY
Sit next to me.He sat beside his wife.She stood by the window.
The pharmacy is next to the bank.She knelt beside the bed.The hotel is by the beach.
He left his bag next to the door.Leave your shoes beside the entrance.He waited by the gate.

Bottom line: In everyday conversation, use next to. It is always correct and natural.


COMPARISON 9: NEAR vs. CLOSE TO vs. BY

These all mean not far from. However, they suggest different distances.

NEARCLOSE TOBY
Distance suggestedGeneral area, not farVery nearby, almost next toRight next to, immediate vicinity
FormalityNeutralNeutralNeutral

Think of it as a scale:

Far โ†โ€”โ€”โ€”โ€”โ€”โ€”โ€”โ€”โ€”โ€”โ€”โ€”โ€”โ€”โ€”โ€”โ€”โ€”โ€”โ€”โ€”โ€”โ€”โ€”โ†’ Very Close
         NEAR    โ†’   CLOSE TO   โ†’   BY

Side-by-side comparisons:

NEARCLOSE TOBY
There is a bank near here.The school is close to the park.She lives by the river.
She lives near the city.He stayed close to his family.Sit by me.
Is there a cafรฉ near the hotel?The station is close to the shopping center.The bench by the entrance.

COMPARISON 10: IN vs. INTO / ON vs. ONTO

These pairs confuse many students. The key difference is static position vs. movement.

ININTO
DescribesStatic position (staying inside)Movement (going inside)
ActionNo movementMoving inward
ONONTO
DescribesStatic position (staying on)Movement (going on top of)
ActionNo movementMoving onto a surface

Side-by-side comparisons:

Static (IN / ON)Movement (INTO / ONTO)
The milk is in the fridge.She put the milk into the fridge.
He is in the pool.He jumped into the pool.
The keys are in her bag.She dropped the keys into her bag.
The cat is on the sofa.The cat jumped onto the sofa.
The book is on the shelf.She placed the book onto the shelf.

Simple Rule:

  • No movement? โ†’ IN / ON
  • Something is moving or being placed? โ†’ INTO / ONTO

COMPARISON 11: IN TIME vs. ON TIME

This is a small but very important difference. Many students use these interchangeably โ€” but they mean different things.

ON TIMEIN TIME
MeaningPunctual โ€” exactly as scheduledEarly enough โ€” before it is too late
FocusMeeting the schedule exactlyHaving enough time, not missing something
Think of it asThe clock is rightThere is time to spare

Side-by-side comparisons:

ON TIME (punctual)IN TIME (early enough)
The train arrived on time.We arrived in time to get good seats.
Please be on time for the meeting.She finished in time for the deadline.
He is never on time.Run! We can still make it in time.
The flight departed on time.The doctor arrived just in time.

Memory Trick ๐Ÿง 

  • ON time = ON the schedule (it matches the timetable exactly)
  • IN time = there is time remaining (you are inside the time limit โ€” not too late)

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