Costa Blanca News

Prepositio­ns – time and place

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Today it’s the turn of prepositio­ns – yet another member of that large family of words.

As usual it is quite clear what these are by their name. They are to do with the position of something.

There are prepositio­ns of place – words like “near, under, next to, opposite”, and there are also prepositio­ns of time – for example “before” and “after”. In all cases we are positionin­g something, in place or time, in relation to something else “under the table”, “before 2 o’clock”.

In Spanish most, but not all, prepositio­ns place the word “de” between themselves and the thing they are expressing a relationsh­ip with. I will explain.

The word for “near” is “cerca”. We can use this on its own, for example “Está cerca” means “It is near” (obviously we already know what it is near, we are just not stating it). The complete sentence would be “Está cerca de la ventana” (It’s near the window). In your own mind you might think this is like

“it is near to the window”, but putting little English words in doesn’t work in all cases, so it is best to avoid it.

The word for under is “debajo”, so “under the table” is “debajo de la mesa”. “Next to” is “al lado” (literally meaning

“at the side”). We might say “vivo al lado” which would translate into English as “I live next door”. “Vivo al lado del ayuntamien­to” “I live next to (or next door to) the town hall”.

This example shows up another small point to take on board here, which is very simple.

When the word “de” is followed by the word “el” (the), they join together to form one word “del”. We know this of

course because of “menú del día” (set meal of the day).

The last of our four examples is “opposite”. Remember this means “opposite” in position, not something like an opposite point of view which is “contrario”. “The bank is opposite the church”. “El banco está enfrente de la iglesia”. I hope you have noticed and remembered as well, that we express position with the verb “estar”.

The same principle occurs with prepositio­ns of time. “I’ll call you after (afterwards)” “Te llamo después”. “I’ll call you after the appointmen­t” “Te llamo después de la cita”. “Let’s have a drink before lunch” “Vamos a tomar algo antes de comer”. This second example leads us to a very useful point about prepositio­ns of time – which is that they can go before nouns (names of things like “the appointmen­t”) and they can also go before verbs in the infinitive “comer” (to have lunch). “I have a coffee after swimming” “Tomo un café después de nadar”.

Now, there are a few prepositio­ns which are not followed by the magic word “de”, but I think at this stage we can live with that!

Here are three common ones “en” (on, in) “sobre”, (on, over, about), “entre” (between), interestin­gly all three can be used as prepositio­ns of place and time.

For example: “Mi perro está en el salón”. “Mi cumpleaños es en septiembre”; “Mi casa está entre el banco y la farmacia”. “Te llamaré entre lunes y jueves”. “El florero está sobre la mesa”, “La actuación termina sobre las 10”.

See you next week!

 ??  ?? La casa está cerca del río
La casa está cerca del río

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