A1 Prepositions of Time & Place Grammar Test 3 – Academic English Foundations | IELTS TOEFL YDS
Master A1 prepositions with exam-style traps including between vs among, at vs in, and by/near/next to. This academic test supports IELTS, TOEFL, and YDS preparation.
Choose the best answer (A, B, or C) to complete each sentence.
Decide using meaning logic (point vs area, 2 vs 3+, near vs next to) and natural academic usage.
Only one option is correct.
RESULTS
#1. The classroom is ___ the library and the cafeteria. (two places)
#2. The student is sitting ___ three classmates. (three people)
#3. The instructor is ___ the entrance, waiting for the group.
#4. The instructor works ___ the university, but today she is ___ Room 204.
#5. The bus stop is ___ the main gate; it is very close.
#6. The bookstore is ___ the campus, so students can walk there easily.
#7. The research poster is ___ the wall, not inside the wall.
#8. The students are waiting ___ the classroom. (inside the room)
#9. The assistant is standing ___ the screen, so we cannot see the slides.
#10. The projector is ___ the screen, so the image is clear.
#11. The meeting is ___ Friday ___ 10:00.
#12. The results will be announced ___ the afternoon.
#13. The seminar is ___ March 2026.
#14. The lecturer lives ___ Antalya and travels ___ Ankara for conferences.
#15. The students walk ___ the classroom and then sit ___ their desks.
🧠 FULL TEACHING-LEVEL EXPLANATIONS (ALL 15)
🧩 1) between the library and the cafeteria
Structural reason: between is used for two reference points.
Meaning logic: library + cafeteria = 2 places.
Rhetorical effect: precise campus mapping.
Why wrong answers fail:
among = for 3+ items/people
next to = “beside,” not “middle”
Exam note: YDS loves between/among because it’s pure logic.
🧩 2) sitting among three classmates
Structural reason: among is used for three or more.
Meaning logic: “three classmates” triggers among.
Rhetorical effect: group positioning description.
Why wrong answers fail:
between = normally two
at = point location
Exam note: TOEFL reading uses among in group contexts (“among participants”).
🧩 3) is at the entrance
Structural reason: at marks a specific point/place marker.
Meaning logic: entrance is a point.
Rhetorical effect: meeting-point clarity.
Why wrong answers fail:
in = inside the entrance (odd)
on = surface contact
Exam note: “at the entrance/door/gate” is a common listening phrase.
🧩 4) works at the university / is in Room 204
Structural reason:
at for institution as a workplace point
in for being inside a room
Meaning logic: workplace vs specific room location.
Rhetorical effect: academic precision.
Why wrong answers fail:
in / in removes the workplace nuance
at / at makes room location unnatural
Exam note: This “at institution / in room” contrast is very testable.
🧩 5) bus stop is next to the main gate
Structural reason: next to = immediately beside.
Meaning logic: “very close” supports next to (strong closeness).
Rhetorical effect: exact navigation cue.
Why wrong answers fail:
near = close but not necessarily beside
among = group context
Exam note: next to vs near is a classic “strength” trap.
🧩 6) bookstore is near the campus
Structural reason: near = close to, but not necessarily touching.
Meaning logic: Students can walk there easily, but it’s not “beside the campus gate.”
Rhetorical effect: practical location description.
Why wrong answers fail:
between needs two points
into is movement
Exam note: IELTS map descriptions often use near.
🧩 7) poster is on the wall
Structural reason: on for surfaces.
Meaning logic: poster is attached to surface.
Rhetorical effect: physical placement clarity.
Why wrong answers fail:
in would mean inside the wall
at is a point marker
Exam note: Surfaces are high-confidence exam points.
🧩 8) waiting in the classroom
Structural reason: in = inside enclosed space.
Meaning logic: explicitly says inside.
Rhetorical effect: clear location statement.
Why wrong answers fail:
at = point/meeting point, not “inside”
to = direction
Exam note: in/at confusion shows up in dialogues.
🧩 9) standing in front of the screen
Structural reason: in front of = blocking the view.
Meaning logic: If we can’t see slides, person is in front.
Rhetorical effect: cause → effect clarity.
Why wrong answers fail:
behind would not block view
next to = beside, not blocking
Exam note: TOEFL listening loves these spatial cause-effect clues.
🧩 10) projector is behind the screen
Structural reason: behind = at the back side.
Meaning logic: For some setups, projector behind screen gives clear image (rear projection).
Rhetorical effect: technical description.
Why wrong answers fail:
in front of would put it between audience and screen
among makes no sense
Exam note: Exams test logical scene matching.
🧩 11) on Friday at 10:00
Structural reason: on for days; at for exact times.
Meaning logic: date + clock time pairing.
Rhetorical effect: schedule precision.
Why wrong answers fail:
in Friday is wrong
at Friday is wrong
Exam note: This “on + day / at + time” combo is extremely frequent.
🧩 12) in the afternoon
Structural reason: in for parts of day.
Meaning logic: afternoon is a period.
Rhetorical effect: timeline range.
Why wrong answers fail:
on = day/date
at = exact time
Exam note: in the morning/afternoon/evening vs at night (later nuance).
🧩 13) in March 2026
Structural reason: in for months/years.
Meaning logic: month-year period.
Rhetorical effect: academic scheduling.
Why wrong answers fail:
on is for specific day/date
at is for exact time
Exam note: Very common in IELTS academic timelines.
🧩 14) lives in Antalya / travels to Ankara
Structural reason: in for cities (location); to for destination movement.
Meaning logic: residence vs travel goal.
Rhetorical effect: clear narrative.
Why wrong answers fail:
at/from mismatches meaning
on/into wrong
Exam note: in + city / to + city is foundational.
🧩 15) walk into the classroom / sit on their desks
Structural reason:
into = entering
on = sitting on top (surface)
Meaning logic: enter room then sit on desk surface (maybe strict teacher says don’t 😄).
Rhetorical effect: action sequence with physical logic.
Why wrong answers fail:
in/at wrong movement logic
to/in lacks the “enter” container meaning + wrong for desk surface
Exam note: into vs to is an exam trap: to = destination, into = entering inside.






