990prep mascot 990prep
Grammar

In, At, On (Position 1)

Using in, at, and on to describe where something or someone is located

In — Inside a Space

Use in when something is inside an enclosed or bounded area. Think of a box, a room, a building, a city, or a body of water — anything with boundaries around it.

TypeExamples
Rooms / buildingsin the meeting room, in the office, in the warehouse
Cities / countriesin Tokyo, in France, in the city centre
Waterin the pool, in the sea, in the river
Containersin a box, in your pocket, in the filing cabinet
  • There’s nobody in the conference room right now.
  • What do you have in your hand?
  • Our head office is in a small town in the south of Germany.
  • Some of the trainees were swimming in the hotel pool after the seminar.

At — A Specific Point or Location

Use at when you think of a place as a point — a stop along a route, a position in space, or a place where something happens. You are not thinking about what is inside the place.

TypeExamples
Stops / junctionsat the bus stop, at the roundabout, at junction 5
Positionsat the door, at the window, at her desk
Counters / desksat reception, at the check-in counter
  • Who is that person standing at the entrance?
  • Turn left at the traffic lights, then right at the next roundabout.
  • We need to get off at the next stop.
  • When you leave the office, please drop your badge at the front desk.

In vs. At — What Is the Difference?

The key difference is perspective. In means you are thinking about being inside a place. At means you are thinking about a point or position.

SentenceWhy?
There were a lot of people in the shop.You are thinking about the people inside the shop.
Turn left at the shop.The shop is a point on a route — you are giving directions.
I’ll meet you in the hotel lobby.Inside the building.
I’ll meet you at the hotel entrance.A point outside the building.

On — Touching a Surface

Use on when something is touching a surface — the top, the side, or the bottom of something.

TypeExamples
Flat surfaceson the floor, on the table, on the ground
Vertical surfaceson the wall, on the door, on the whiteboard
Other surfaceson the ceiling, on your nose, on your shirt
Pages / screenson page seven, on the screen, on the website
Islandson a small island
  • I left the report on the table.
  • There’s a coffee stain on your shirt.
  • Did you see the new safety notice on the wall?
  • You’ll find the agenda on page three of the document.
  • The factory is on a small island in the middle of the river.

In vs. On — Side by Side

Sometimes the same object uses both in and on, depending on whether you mean inside it or on its surface.

SentenceWhy?
There is some water in the bottle.The water is inside.
There is a label on the bottle.The label is on the surface.

At vs. On — Same Object, Different Meaning

SentenceWhy?
There is somebody at the door.A person is standing by the door (a position).
There is a notice on the door.A piece of paper is attached to the surface.

Quick Self-Check

Question 1

The new price list is _____ page 12 of the catalogue.

Select your answer:

Question 2

Please leave your visitor badge _____ the reception desk when you go.

Select your answer:

Question 3

Our regional office is _____ a small village _____ the mountains.

Select your answer:

Question 4

There's a crack _____ the ceiling above my desk. I reported it to maintenance.

Select your answer:

Question 5

Get off the shuttle bus _____ the next stop, then walk straight to the office.

Select your answer:

Related Courses