Welcome back to our grammar hangout! Today, we are learning an absolute, unbreakable law of the English language. Master this one simple rule, and you will instantly fix thousands of tiny speaking mistakes.
(🧴 Easy Guide: Prepositions + -ing (The Sticky Glue Rule))
Imagine Prepositions—those little spatial, timing, or connector words like in, on, at, about, for, of, before, after, and by.
In English, prepositions have a favorite food: Nouns (things, places, or people). They love to sit right in front of them: in the kitchen, at the desk, about the movie.
But what happens if a preposition sits right next to a Verb (an action word)? Prepositions cannot hold a raw action word. So, they apply a layer of magical “-ing” sticky glue to that action, instantly turning it into a noun form!
🗺️ 1. The Visual Flow: The Sticky Glue Rule
Look at this simple path that happens inside an English sentence when a preposition meets an action:
🛠️ 2. The Golden Law: Never Use “Bare” Verbs
Whenever any preposition (except the word to in basic future plans) sits in front of an action, the action word must take an “-ing” layout.
- ❌ Don’t say: “Thank you for help me.”
- ✓ Correct: “Thank you for helping me.”
- ❌ Don’t say: “I’m bad at cook.”
- ✓ Correct: “I’m bad at cooking.”
📊 3. The Ultimate Preposition + “-ing” Cheat Sheet
Here is your master table showing the most common real-life combos used by native speakers every single day:
| The Combo Family 👥 | The Core Meaning 💡 | Real-Life Creative Example 💬 | What Happened? ⚙️ |
|---|---|---|---|
| Good / Bad AT | Talking about your skills. | “I am terrible at memorizing names.” | At glues memorize into memorizing. |
| Interested IN | Talking about your hobbies. | “She is interested in learn**ing** photography.” | In glues learn into learning. |
| Thank you FOR | Showing gratitude for an action. | “Thank you for buying me lunch!” | For glues buy into buying. |
| Before / After | Organizing a timeline of events. | “After finishing my homework, I played games.” | After glues finish into finishing. |
| By | Explaining how you did a task. | “You can unlock the door by turning the key.” | By glues turn into turning. |
| Afraid OF | Talking about fears or worries. | “He is afraid of flying in airplanes.” | Of glues fly into flying. |
🪤 4. The Famous “TO” Trap
This is the number one trap that tricks almost every English learner in the world!
Usually, we use the word to with clean, bare verbs (“I want to go,” “I decide to eat”). In those sentences, to is just an infinitive helper.
But sometimes, TO is a real preposition meaning a direction or a fixed connection to something! When to is acting as a real preposition, the sticky glue rule applies, and it requires an -ing word!
🔔 “I am looking forward TO…” (This means you are happily waiting for a future event).
• ❌ Incorrect: I am looking forward to meet you.
• ✓ Correct: I am looking forward to meeting you!
🎨 5. A Creative Story: The Saturday Morning Project
Let’s see how two friends, Leo and Sam, use prepositions and “-ing” actions naturally while working on a garage art project over the weekend.
Leo: “Sam, thanks a lot for helping me repaint this old wooden table today!” (Gratitude combo → for helping)
Sam: “No problem! You know I’m always interested in doing creative crafts anyway. Wow, look at your technique—you are really good at paint**ing** straight lines!” (Hobby & skill combos → in doing / at painting)
Leo: “Haha, thanks! I practiced a lot. But whew, before starting the second coat of paint, we should definitely open a window. The chemical smell is intense.” (Timeline combo → before starting)
Sam: “Good call. I am actually a bit afraid of breathing in these fumes all morning.” (Fear combo → of breathing)
Leo: “Don’t worry, once the window is open, the air will clear out. I am really looking forward to seeing the final result tonight!” (The famous ‘TO’ trap → to seeing)
Sam: “Me too! Let’s get that window cracked open so we can keep going.”