Verb + Preposition 5 (in/into/with/to/on)
Common verb + preposition combinations with in, into, with, to, and on for workplace communication
Verb + in
Believe in means you think something exists or that something is right to do.
- Do you believe in flexible working hours? (= do you think they are a good thing?)
- Our CEO believes in investing heavily in R&D.
When you simply think a statement is true, drop the in. Just say believe + object.
- The rumour can’t be true. I don’t believe it. (not
believe in it)
Specialise in — focus your expertise on one area.
- Our firm specialises in corporate tax law.
Succeed in — manage to do something.
- After months of searching, she succeeded in landing a management role.
Verb + into
Break into — enter a place by force.
- Someone broke into the warehouse over the weekend, but the security cameras caught them.
Crash / drive / bump / run into — hit something while moving.
- A delivery truck lost control and crashed into the loading dock.
Divide / cut / split something into two or more parts.
- The training programme is divided into four modules.
Translate something from one language into another.
- The user manual has been translated into twelve languages.
Verb + with
Collide with — crash into something (used for two moving objects).
- The forklift collided with a pallet stack near the exit.
Fill something with — make something full. (Note: the adjective is full of, not full with.)
- Please fill this form with as much detail as possible.
Provide / supply somebody with — give someone what they need.
| Verb | Pattern | Example |
|---|---|---|
| provide | somebody with something | The company provides all new hires with a laptop. |
| supply | somebody with something | Our vendor supplies us with raw materials every month. |
Verb + to
Happen to — used when you ask or talk about what has become of something or someone.
- What happened to the project proposal you were working on?
Invite somebody to an event.
- We invited several key clients to the product launch.
Prefer one thing to another — like one thing more than something else.
- I prefer video calls to phone calls — it’s easier to read people’s reactions.
Verb + on
Concentrate on — give all your attention to something.
- I need to concentrate on finishing this report before the deadline.
Insist on — say firmly that something must happen.
- The client insisted on reviewing every clause in the contract.
Spend (money/time) on — use money or time for a purpose.
- How much does your team spend on software subscriptions each year?
Quick Self-Check
Helen is a lawyer. She _____ company law.
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Our house was _____ a few days ago, but nothing was stolen.
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The school provides all its students _____ books.
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I tried to concentrate _____ my work, but I kept thinking about other things.
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I don't mind big cities, but I prefer small towns _____ big cities.
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