Verb + Preposition 3: about and of
How to choose between about and of after hear, think, dream, complain, and remind
Overview
Several common verbs change their meaning depending on whether you follow them with about or of. Picking the wrong preposition can confuse your listener or make your sentence sound unnatural. This lesson covers five verb groups where the choice matters: hear, think, dream, complain, and remind.
hear + about / of / from
These three prepositions give hear three different jobs.
| Pattern | Meaning | Example |
|---|---|---|
| hear about | receive news or information | Did you hear about the reorganisation in the sales department? |
| hear of | know that something or someone exists | Have you ever heard of that consulting firm? I can’t find anything online. |
| hear from | receive a message or call from someone | I haven’t heard from the supplier since last Monday. |
Watch out: when someone asks “Have you heard of him?”, they want to know if you recognise the name. If they ask “Have you heard from him?”, they want to know if he contacted you. Big difference in a work context.
think + about / of
Think about and think of overlap in some situations, but each one has a core job of its own.
| Pattern | Core meaning | Example |
|---|---|---|
| think about | consider carefully, focus your mind on | I’ve thought about your proposal, and I’d like to move forward. |
| think of | come up with an idea, produce something mentally | We need a name for the project. Can you think of one? |
Asking for opinions
When you ask someone what they think of something, you want their opinion.
- What did you think of the presentation?
- I didn’t think much of the new office layout. (= I didn’t like it)
When either works
If someone is on your mind and you are not making a decision or producing an idea, both prepositions are fine.
- When I walk past that café, I always think of you. or … think about you.
The same goes for possible future plans:
- She’s thinking of applying for the team lead role. or … thinking about applying …
dream + about / of
| Pattern | Meaning | Example |
|---|---|---|
| dream about | see while sleeping | I dreamt about the deadline all night — not a restful sleep. |
| dream of / about + -ing | imagine, wish for | He dreams of running his own startup one day. |
There is also a fixed negative expression: wouldn’t dream of doing something means you would absolutely never do it.
- Share your salary details with a competitor? I wouldn’t dream of it.
complain + about / of
| Pattern | Meaning | Example |
|---|---|---|
| complain (to someone) about | express dissatisfaction | Several clients complained to the manager about the slow response times. |
| complain of | report a symptom or pain | He left early because he was complaining of a headache. |
In everyday office talk, complain about is far more common. You will mostly see complain of in medical or formal contexts.
remind + about / of
| Pattern | Meaning | Example |
|---|---|---|
| remind someone about | tell someone so they don’t forget | Can you remind me about the 3 p.m. call? I might lose track of time. |
| remind someone of | make someone remember (by similarity) | This open-plan office reminds me of the one we had in the old building. |
A helpful way to keep them apart: remind about looks forward (don’t forget this thing), while remind of looks backward (this brings back a memory).
Quick Self-Check
A new intern just joined the team. — Really? I've never _____ her.
Select your answer:
We need to cut costs. Can you _____ any ways to reduce the budget?
Select your answer:
I _____ leaving the project, but I haven't decided yet.
Select your answer:
Several employees _____ the manager _____ the broken air conditioning.
Select your answer:
This building _____ me _____ the office I worked in five years ago.
Select your answer:
Related Courses
Common verb + preposition combinations with about, for, of, and after, including care about vs. care for, and look for vs. look after
Common verb + preposition combinations with of, for, from, and on used in everyday and workplace English