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Jon8 Posted 12 years ago
Grammar

video of/on

I want to watch a video [on/of] how they won the game?

When do you use the "on" and "of" preposition
  

Top answer

I want to watch a video of how they won the game. I want to watch a video about how they won the game. I want to watch a video on how they won the game.

  • I want to watch a video of how they won the game.
  • I want to watch a video about how they won the game.
  • I want to watch a video on how they won the game.
  • "how they won the game" is a noun clause.
  • It can follow different prepositions.
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2 Answers
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I want to watch a video of how they won the game.
I want to watch a video about how they won the game.
I want to watch a video on how they won the game.

"how they won the game" is a noun clause. It can follow different prepositions. Different people will choose different prepositions. I have put them in the order that I prefer, from most preferred to least preferred.
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Thank you for your reply. I just want to clarify, they all mean the same thing?

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