0
Anonymous Posted 18 years ago
Grammar

Parts of speech of "for"

Ok, I have this snooty math teacher that is constantly correcting people's grammar skills. It's funny at times in an annoying way. Anyways, I had vocabulary words up in my class and I had the word "target", with the definition "something you aim for". Now he brought up the point that I ended the phrase with a preposition, which is entirely true. After explaining that it was informal English, "shorthand", in other words, I explained to him that in the sentence, "for" could not be considered a preposition because it did not have an object following it. Therefore, it had to be considered an adverb. I then looked up the word in the dictionary and was surprised to see that it was listed as a preposition and a conjunction, but not an adverb. So who's right, the dictionary or myself?
  

Top answer

Hi, Ok, I have this snooty math teacher that is constantly correcting people's grammar skills. It's funny at times in an annoying way. Anyways, I had vocabulary words up in my class and I had the word "target", with the definition "something you aim for".

  • Hi, Ok, I have this snooty math teacher that is constantly correcting people's grammar skills.
  • It's funny at times in an annoying way.
  • Anyways, I had vocabulary words up in my class and I had the word "target", with the definition "something you aim for".
  • Now he brought up the point that I ended the phrase with a preposition, which is entirely true.
  • After explaining that it was informal English, "shorthand", in other words, I explained to him that in the sentence, "for" could not be considered a preposition because it did not have an object following it.
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

2 Answers
0
Hi,
Ok, I have this snooty math teacher that is constantly correcting people's grammar skills. It's funny at times in an annoying way. Anyways, I had vocabulary words up in my class and I had the word "target", with the definition "something you aim for". Now he brought up the point that I ended the phrase with a preposition, which is entirely true. After explaining that it was informal E
0
"for" is a preposition. It is displaced in that expression, which is a variant of "something that you aim for", that is, "you aim for something". "something" is the object of the preposition.
The injunction against ending a sentence with a preposition went out about a million years ago.

Related Questions