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Believer Posted 19 years ago
Grammar

what could come after a preposition?

Hi,

Please tell me what grammatical elements can come after a preposition?

1. The situation can be seen as bad.

2. ... between bad and good.

Normally, I think what comes after a preposition is a noun, pronoun or noun equivalent, but I also think an adjective can be used after some prepositions.
  

Top answer

Yes, an adjective can come after a preposition.

  • Yes, an adjective can come after a preposition.
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4 Answers
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Yes, an adjective can come after a preposition.
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The only thing that can come after a preposition to form a prepositional phrase is a noun phrase, usually a noun accompanied by its preceding determiner and perhaps an adjective. A relative clause may be added. The noun itself may be a gerund.

If the element after the candidate for a preposition looks like it's not a noun, then either of these holds:

a. The preposition
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Should one use the objective form of the word, such as "for he" or "for him"?t
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Anonymous"for he" or "for him"
It's "for him". Personal pronouns after prepositions are always in the objective case.

[with, for, about, to, ...] [me, him, her, us, them, you]

CJ

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