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Guest Posted 23 years ago
Grammar

What's the term for this?

What is the term called when somebody says,

"Where are you going to?"
Or
"Where is the party at?"

I know it is not a double negative, but I can't think of the correct term.
  

Top answer

Hanging preposition.

  • Hanging preposition.
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4 Answers
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Hanging preposition.
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Also dangling preposition.

As for your examples:

Where are you going to? - to can be ommited here.

Where is the party at? - in my opinion, at is nonstandard here. I would avoid it.
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-- What is the term called?
-- I would say superfluousness.
-- But what is the term itself?
-- I would say superfluity.

Just joking. Is there really a term for it?

CJ
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In English it is simply a preposition used at the end of a clause, correctly or incorrectly. In many other languages it would be called a postposition since it comes after (post) the word(s) it refers to, not before (pre).

Cheers
CB

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