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Grammar

Adjective + Preposition 2

Common adjective + preposition combinations with of, at, to, from, in, on, with, and for

Adjective + of

Many adjectives pair with of. These often describe feelings or qualities directed at a person, thing, or situation.

AdjectivePatternExample
afraid / scared / frightened / terrifiedof somethingShe’s terrified of flying, so she always takes the train for business trips.
fond / proud / ashamed / jealous / enviousof somebody/somethingThe whole team is proud of the product they shipped last quarter.
suspicious / critical / tolerantof somethingThe auditor was suspicious of the unusual transactions.
aware / consciousof somethingI wasn’t aware of the policy change until the meeting.
capable / incapableof somethingShe’s capable of managing the entire project on her own.
full / shortof somethingWe’re a bit short of staff this week because of the holiday.
typicalof somebodyHe missed the deadline again. It’s typical of him.
certain / sureof or about somethingI’m not sure of that. Let me double-check the numbers.

Notice that sure and certain can take either of or about with no change in meaning.

Adjective + at

Use at after adjectives that describe skill or ability level.

AdjectiveExample
good / bad / brilliant / better / hopelessHe’s good at handling difficult clients.

A common mistake is to say good in doing something. The correct preposition is at.

  • I’m not very good at public speaking, but I’m getting better. (not good in public speaking)
  • She’s hopeless at keeping track of expenses.

Adjective + to

Several adjectives take to. Pay attention to these fixed combinations:

AdjectivePatternExample
married / engagedto somebodyLaura is married to an engineer. (not married with)
similarto somethingTheir new branding is similar to ours.
differentfrom or to somethingThe final version was quite different from what we discussed.

Be careful with married. When you talk about who a person is married to, use to. But you can say married with children, meaning the person is married and has children.

  • He’s married to a colleague from the finance team.
  • She’s married with two kids. (= she is married and has two children)

Adjective + from

Different takes from (or to in British English).

  • Working from home is different from working in an office.
  • The results were different from what we expected.

Both different from and different to are correct. You will hear different from more often in formal writing.

Adjective + in / on / with / for

Here are more combinations that come up regularly in professional settings:

Adjective + prepositionExample
interested inAre you interested in joining the new project?
keen onThe manager isn’t keen on changing the schedule.
dependent on (but independent of)The timeline is dependent on when we receive the budget approval.
crowded withThe conference hall was crowded with attendees. (but: full of attendees)
famous forThat consulting firm is famous for its leadership training.
responsible forWho is responsible for maintaining the client database?

Notice the contrast between dependent on and independent of — they use different prepositions.

  • She wants to be independent of her parents financially.
  • The project deadline is dependent on vendor delivery.

Also note: crowded with and full of mean similar things, but the prepositions are different.

  • The office kitchen was crowded with people. / The kitchen was full of people.

Quick Self-Check

Question 1

We're a bit _____ staff this month. We need to hire two more people.

Select your answer:

Question 2

He's not very _____ remembering passwords. He resets his every week.

Select your answer:

Question 3

Lisa is married _____ a software developer from our London office.

Select your answer:

Question 4

The team leader is _____ updating the weekly report every Friday.

Select your answer:

Question 5

I wasn't _____ the new dress code until someone pointed it out.

Select your answer:

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