Adjective + Preposition 1
Common adjective + preposition combinations: of, to, about, with, at, by, and for
Why This Matters
In English, certain adjectives always go with specific prepositions. You cannot guess which preposition to use. You just have to learn the combinations. Getting these wrong is one of the most common mistakes in business emails and meetings.
Nice of You vs. Nice to Me
When you judge someone’s behaviour, use adjective + of + person.
- It was very kind of Sarah to show the new intern around the office.
- It was generous of the company to cover all travel expenses.
- It was careless of him to send that email to the wrong client.
This pattern works with: nice, kind, good, generous, polite, honest, stupid, silly, careless.
When you describe how someone treats another person, use adjective + to + person.
- Our manager has always been very friendly to everyone on the team.
- Why were you so rude to the receptionist?
- He was incredibly kind to me during my first week.
| Pattern | Meaning | Example |
|---|---|---|
| adjective + of + person | judging their action | It was nice of you to help. |
| adjective + to + person | how they treat someone | She’s always nice to me. |
Angry / Annoyed / Upset about Something, with Someone
When the cause of the feeling is a situation or thing, use about.
- The team was upset about the schedule change.
- There’s no point getting angry about things you can’t control.
- She’s excited about the new project launch.
- Are you nervous about your performance review?
When the cause is a person, use with (often followed by for doing something).
- The client is annoyed with us for missing the deadline.
- Are you angry with me for not replying sooner?
Pleased / Disappointed with Something
When you talk about something you received or experienced, use with.
- They were delighted with the quarterly results.
- Were you satisfied with the training session?
- I’m a bit disappointed with the new software update.
Surprised / Impressed at or by
Some adjectives accept two prepositions with no change in meaning.
| Adjective | Prepositions | Example |
|---|---|---|
| surprised | at / by | Everyone was surprised at the announcement. |
| shocked | at / by | I was shocked by the cost of the repairs. |
| amazed | at / by | We were amazed at how fast the team delivered. |
| impressed | with / by | The director was impressed with your proposal. |
Fed Up / Bored with and Tired of
- I’m fed up with these constant system outages.
- She’s bored with doing the same task every day.
- I’m tired of waiting for approval. Let’s escalate it.
Sorry about vs. Sorry for
Both work when you apologize for something you did.
- I’m sorry about the confusion in yesterday’s report. (situation)
- I’m sorry for sending you the wrong file. (your action)
- Sorry about the delay. or Sorry for the delay. (both fine)
Use sorry for + person when you feel sympathy.
- I feel sorry for Jake. He’s been working overtime for three weeks straight. (not
sorry about Jake)
Quick Self-Check
It was very generous _____ the company to offer relocation support.
Select your answer:
Why are you so angry _____ me? I didn't do anything wrong.
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The whole team was impressed _____ the new hire's presentation skills.
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I'm tired _____ having the same discussion in every meeting.
Select your answer:
I feel sorry _____ the interns. Nobody explained the process to them.
Select your answer: