时间:2019-01-12 作者:英语课 分类:2015年VOA慢速英语(四)月


英语课

Everyday Grammar: Put Prepositions in Their Place 每日语法:把介词放到该放的位置


English learners know that prepositions can be difficult to master. There are 94 one-word prepositions in English, and about 56 prepositions with two or more words, called “complex prepositions.” This adds up to 150 chances to make mistakes.


We cannot, of course, explain the small differences between all 150 prepositions here. We can, however, provide you with a few explanations of different prepositions that use one particular verb: provide.


Provide (someone) with:


When provide is followed by an indirect object, English speakers use the preposition “with.” Providing (someone) with something means to give something wanted or needed.


Here is an example sentence, written by U.S. First Lady Michelle Obama: “Room to Read provides girls with scholarships that cover the cost of housing, food, and books.”


In this sentence, “girls” is the indirect object and “scholarships” is the direct object.


Provide for:  


Another preposition with the same verb is “provide for.” “Provide for,” in general, means to make whatever is necessary for someone available to him or her. We often use this expression when we talk about parents providing for their family.


 In a VOA Learning English story about a Cambodian-American filmmaker, we used the preposition in this way: “She says changes such as migration 1 away from rural areas are allowing more women to find work and provide for their families.”


This preposition can also be used in other ways. “Provide for” can mean to make it possible for something to happen in the future. For example, in our story about water shortage 2 in California, we wrote, “They say it [California] needs to find a way to provide for the growing need for water.”


Provide (something) to/for:  


When “provide” is followed by a direct object, English speakers can use the prepositions “to” or “for.” Provide (something) to/for (someone) means that you deliver or give something to someone. For example, “The company provides health insurance to all of its employees.” “Health insurance” is the direct object and “employees” is the indirect object. In this example, we also could have said “The company provides health insurance for all of its employees.”  


Both of these sentences are correct, but it is more common to use “provide (something) for” than “provide (something to)” someone. The expression using “to” is rather new to American English, according to the Internet application Google Ngrams.


Google Ngrams is an app that shows general changes in English usage 3 by searching all the words in Google’s digital books.


The graph on Ngram for “provide (something) to” shows it was hardly ever used before 1960.


Compare that to the Ngram graph for “provide (something for).” The expressions appear more often. The expressions also appeared much earlier, around 1920. They were used then almost as often as they are used now.


Understanding English prepositions can be difficult, even for native speakers! But we hope that we have been able to provide assistance to all of our listeners and readers.


I’m Jill Robbins.


Jill Robbins wrote this story for Learning English. Ashley Thompson was the editor.


Words in This Story


prepositions - n. a word or group of words that is used with a noun, pronoun, or noun phrase to show direction, location, or time, or to introduce an object


direct object - n. a noun, pronoun, or noun phrase which indicates the person or thing that receives the action of a verb


indirect object - n. a noun, pronoun, or noun phrase that occurs in addition to a direct object after some verbs and indicates the person or thing that receives what is being given or done 



n.迁移,移居,(鸟类等的)迁徙
  • Swallows begin their migration south in autumn.燕子在秋季开始向南方迁移。
  • He described the vernal migration of birds in detail.他详细地描述了鸟的春季移居。
n.缺少,缺乏,不足
  • The city is suffering a desperate shortage of water.这个城市严重缺水。
  • The heart of the problem is a shortage of funds.问题的关键是缺乏经费。
n.惯用法,使用,用法
  • I am clear about the usage of this word at last.这个词的用法我算是弄明白了。
  • The usage is now firmly established.这种用法现已得到确认。
标签: VOA慢速英语
学英语单词
abdominal-type respiration
abstract syntax tree
aeq
after-days
aknee
ammualization of expenses
ardisia sieboldii
Atrachely
bacterial leaching
baritone guitars
Belotintsi
beta starch
blandi
blunder upon
Breitenfelde
client-state
co-brothers
coaxility
constances
daughter cell nuclei
decangular
deck covering plan
despere
dictyostelium exiguum
didyma (dhidhima )
display access and modify card
disposal of refuse
disulphid
dollfus
dolven
duriss
earnings dilution
environmentaltemperature
EUPTEROTIDAE
fibrous tactoid
fixed plow
fixed-frequency monitor
fritter batter
genus calosomas
graphic statistics
hang times
hip-shot
hoard up
hole type penetrometer
homopolar cohesive bond
hulke
Impatiens radiata
interdicts
jockey into
jueces
kornbluh
lalande
Laudians
least squares estimator (lse)
lethal ultraviolet radiation
loss of a right
luggageless
mat printing
mechanical smoke control
Menhydrin
mesodermat
mesozone
micropublishing
multipunched
Olyutorskiye Gory
organic-removal pretreatment
ossificans sarcoma
Ottelia cordata
outbrag
oxylinkage
parallelising
pinares
plank sheer board
pluck a pigeon
previvors
rabbit-ear test
red dwarves
Regional Association for Asia
Robert Treat Paine
Salpingo-Oophorostomy
seismic Mach number
separative efficiency
Shumerlinskiy Rayon
sorrower
sperm banking
spun rayon
squeeze film damper
standard default
sulfureted hydrogen
take the world as it is
torturers
transmission photograph
tricolour pick-up tube
ultramicrochemists
waiting for godot
well-apparelled
wengert
wightin
Young's interfenrece fringes
zarish
zingerman
zona-