ShmoopTube

Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.

Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos


Grammar Videos 59 videos

Phrases, Clauses, and Sentences
7455 Views

Want even more deets on grammar? Click here for all the goods.

Fewer vs. Less
1680 Views

Want even more deets on Fewer vs. Less? Click here to review. Or take a look at our entire grammar section for all the goods.

Figuring Out What a Word Means
4459 Views

Want even more deets on grammar? Click here for all the goods.

See All

Can I End a Sentence in a Preposition? 515 Views


Share It!


Description:

Want even more deets on ending a sentence with a preposition? Take a look at our entire grammar section for all the goods.

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:04

Can I End a Sentence in a Preposition? a la Shmoop

00:07

You hear it every morning. You put on your robe, exit your cloistered chambers, greet

00:11

the day with barely-open eyes… and then ask the bishop, “Where is the goat at?”

00:16

And he always responds in that superior tone of his, “He’s probably in school, learning

00:20

how to properly construct a sentence.”

00:23

That bishop can be a real pain sometimes.

00:25

All you want to do is milk a goat to make some yogurt. You don’t want a grammar lesson.

00:29

So, while flagellating yourself in your chambers, you ask the heavens, “Can I end a sentence

00:34

in a preposition?”

00:35

<<booming, God voice>> YES.

00:37

Okay. It’s not quite so simple. There are always exceptions.

00:40

First, what the H-E-double hockey sticks is a preposition?

00:43

A preposition is a word that creates a relationship between two words, usually having to do with

00:49

space or direction, or time.

00:52

For example, The goat went over the fence.

00:55

Over is the preposition, telling what direction the goat went in relation to the fence.

01:01

Another example is: I saw the goat before lunch.

01:05

Before is the preposition, telling when in time the goat was seen.

01:11

Almost all of the time, a preposition needs an object.

01:13

You can’t say: I saw the goat before.

01:15

Before what? Before breakfast? Before the apocalypse?

01:20

However, you don’t need an object if the object is self-explanatory or is elsewhere

01:27

in the sentence.

01:28

For example: What did I just step in?

01:31

If you want to get picky, the one-hundred-percent grammatically correct way to say this is “In

01:38

what did I just step?”

01:40

But no one, not even monks, talk like that. So it’s okay to say “What did I step in?”

01:44

to avoid sounding snooty or pedantic.

01:47

Basically, If there’s no other way to word it without sounding like a person from another

01:52

century, it’s a-ok.

01:55

So is it okay to end a sentence with a preposition?

01:58

Or should we say, what kind of prepositions can you end a sentence with?

02:03

A preposition always needs an object.

02:05

But the object can be elsewhere in the sentence, not just after the preposition.

02:10

If it sounds better with the preposition at the end, then it’s totally fine to do so.

02:15

And you can tell the bishop that, if he has a problem with it, he can talk to US.

Related Videos

Affect vs. Effect
10818 Views

This video explains the difference between affect and effect and provide tips for remembering which is which and when to use each one. If you suffe...

Question Marks
3733 Views

Want even more deets on Question Marks? Click here to review. Or take a look at our entire grammar section for all the goods.

Long vs. Short Sentences
2882 Views

Want even more deets on grammar? Click here for all the goods.

Your vs. You're
4158 Views

Want even more deets on Your vs. You're? Click here to review. Or take a look at our entire grammar section for all the goods.

Its vs. It's
5830 Views

What’s the difference between its and it’s (spoiler alert: it’s more than just an apostrophe). This video covers the use of both of these wor...