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Angliholic Posted 19 years ago
Grammar

There is a pile of toys in/at the corner of the children's room.

There is a pile of toys in/at the corner of the children's room.

Which prep. make more sense fitting in the above sample, in or at? Thanks.
  

Top answer

in the corner.

  • in the corner.
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4 Answers
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Grammar Geek...in the corner.

Thanks, GG.

But could you describe in a few words why at the corner doesn't work in the context?
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Just the craziness of English prepositions, I guess. You can stand at the corner of two streets, but in a room, something is in the corner.

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