A Word, Please: You can end a sentence with a preposition if you want to
Over the years, Iâve seen a lot of âmost common grammar mistakesâ lists on the internet. And, over the years, Iâve learned theyâre almost always wrong. That is, in every published list of the grammar mistakes youâre supposedly making, thereâs usually one or two that arenât mistakes at all. Itâs the author whoâs mistaken.
But that experience didnât prepare me for a post I came across recently on yourdictionary.com titled â18 Most Common Grammar Mistakes.â Though this list contained more than one bit of misguided advice, No. 9 stopped me in my tracks.
âNine. Another common grammar mistake is ending a sentence with a preposition,â the author wrote. âA preposition, by its nature, indicates that another word will follow it. In casual conversation, this type of error is no big deal, but you should avoid this mistake in your writing.
For example: Incorrect: âWhat reason did he come here for?â Correct: For what reason did he come here?ââ
This just isnât true. Never has been. Itâs a superstition â one thatâs been debunked over and over by every credible authority under the sun. In fact, this fake rule has been exposed so many times in recent years that I figured it was fading into memory. But nope. It persists. So itâs a good idea to understand the underlying grammar concepts and why this supposed rule is wrong.
Professional editors often avoid capitalizing words that are treated like proper names elsewhere.
Prepositions arenât easily defined. Hereâs Merriam-Websterâs Collegiate Dictionaryâs definition of preposition: âa function word that typically combines with a noun phrase to form a phrase which usually expresses a modification or predication.â
Not much to sink your teeth into there. But a usage note in Merriamâs explains it better. âA preposition is a word â and almost always a very small, very common word â that shows direction (to in âa letter to youâ), location (at in âat the doorâ), or time (by in âby noonâ), or that introduces an object (of in âa basket of applesâ). Prepositions are typically followed by an object, which can be a noun (noon), a noun phrase (the door), or a pronoun (you).â
Some of the most common prepositions are: at, by, for, from, in, of, on, to, with, above, across, after, against, along, among, around, before, behind, below, beneath, beside, between, during, except, inside, instead of, into, like, near, off, on top of, onto, out of, outside, over, past, since, though, toward, over, under, until and without.
As Merriamâs noted, these words usually take a noun or pronoun as their object, like âcheeseâ in âwith cheeseâ or âthe officeâ in âat the office.â And therein lies the germ of our grammar myth. If a preposition takes an object and is, as Merriamâs notes, âusually followed byâ that object, it calls into question a sentence like âWhat did you do that for,â in which the preposition âforâ is followed by nothing. âWho are you going with,â âThatâs one person Iâm impressed byâ and âHamburgers are the food I eat the most ofâ all end with a preposition followed by nothing, so people figure these must be grammar mistakes. Not true.
âThere is nothing wrong with ending a sentence with a preposition like âto,â âwith,â âforâ or âat,ââ Merriamâs notes. English speakers have been doing so since the days of Old English.â
Hereâs Bryan Garner in Garnerâs Modern American Usage: âThe spurious rule about not ending sentences with prepositions is a remnant of Latin grammar, in which a preposition was the one word that a writer could not end a sentence with.â (See what he did there?)
American Heritage Dictionary also traces the superstition to misapplied rules of Latin and sets the record straight. âEnglish syntax does allow for final placement of the preposition, as in âWe have much to be thankful for.ââ
All credible language authorities agree: Itâs not a grammar error to end a sentence with a preposition. Itâs a shame more people donât realize it.
The writer is the author of âThe Joy of Syntax: A Simple Guide to All the Grammar You Know You Should Know.â She can be reached at [email protected].
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