Prepositions of Time
Preposition of time
Explanations Example
#on
days
weekend (American English)
Many shops don’t open on Sundays.
What did you do on the weekend?
#in
months / seasons / year
morning / evening / afternoon
period of time
I visited Italy in July, in spring, in 1994
In the evenings, I like to relax.
This is the first cigarette I’ve had in three years.
#at
night
weekend (British English)
used to show an exact or a particular time:
It gets cold at night.
What did you do at the weekend?
There’s a meeting at 2.30 this afternoon / at lunch time.
#since
from a particular time in the past until a later time, or until now
England have not won the World Cup in football since 1966
#for
used to show an amount of time.
I’m just going to bed for an hour or so.
#ago
back in the past; back in time from the present:
The dinosaurs died out 65 million years ago.
#before
at or during a time earlier than
She’s always up before dawn.
#to
used when saying the time, to mean before the stated hour
It’s twenty to six.
#past
telling the time
five past ten
#to
until a particular time, marking end of a period of time
It’s only two weeks to Christmas.
#from
used to show the time when something starts
The museum is open from 9.30 to 6.00 Tuesday to Sunday.
#till / #until
up to (the time that)
We waited till / until half past six for you.
#by
not later than; at or before
She had promised to be back by five o’clock.