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prepositional phrase

Other forms: prepositional phrases

A prepositional phrase is a preposition plus a noun or pronoun. You can think of a prepositional phrase as “anywhere a cat can go.” A cat can walk “across the floor,” “under the table,” and “out the door.”

All prepositional phrases contain a preposition, a word that shows a relationship, plus a noun or pronoun. When you say, "The cat jumped over the wall," "over" is a preposition and “wall” is a noun, so "over the grass" is a prepositional phrase. The subject or verb of a sentence is never in the prepositional phrase, so prepositional phrases add flavor or specificity, but sentences can survive without them.

Definitions of prepositional phrase
  1. noun
    a phrase beginning with a preposition
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    type of:
    phrase
    an expression consisting of one or more words forming a grammatical constituent of a sentence
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