Prepositions of place, direction, distance
The correct usage of prepositions referring to place, direction and distance depends on how we perceive the thing/object. Basically there are three types of places:
| Explanations | Examples | 
|---|---|
| 1. The place is seen as a simple point in space, but without referring to length, width and height. | |
| simple location | We met at the cinema.  They stayed away from the cinema.  | 
  
| destination | They went to the cinema.  They ran (away) from the cinema.  | 
  
| 2. The place is seen as a line as a length dimension but not as a width and height dimension. | |
| simple location | Tim stood on the goal-line.  The battle was fought off the coast of Africa.  | 
  
| destination | The car turned off the main road.  They walked along the street.  | 
  
| 3. The place is seen as a surface that is as length and width dimensions (without height) | |
| simple location | The book was on the shelf.  The book was off the desk.  | 
  
| destination | He dropped the book on(to) the table.  Tim took the book off the shelf. He fell off the chair.  | 
  
| The place is seen as a surface (ground or the terrain within its boundaries) | |
| simple location | The tourists were in the square.  The sales representative is out of town today.  | 
  
| destination | The path goes through a field.  The soldiers crowded into the market.  | 
  
| The place is seen as a three-dimensional space | |
| simple location | He was in the garage.  He was out of the room.  | 
  
| destination | He ran into the room.  He ran out of the room.  | 
| contrast between 'at' and 'on' | |
| When a place is seen as a simple point | The plane stopped at London on its way to New York. | 
| When a place is seen as a closed territory | She lives in London. | 
| with parts of towns/cities | They lived in Manhattan. | 
| When a building is perceived in institutional categories | I saw him at the hospital. | 
| When a building is perceived in physical categories | I saw him in the hospital. | 
| Contrast between 'on' and 'in' | |
| When we see the object as a surface | Pieces of wood were floating on the water. | 
| When we see the object as space | The children were playing in the water. | 
| Prepositions showing location or destination in relation to the landmark | |
| simple location (vertical) | The apple is on top of the cupboard.  The apple is below the cupboard.  | 
  
| simple location (horizontal) | There are some trees in front of the house.  There are some trees behind the house.  | 
  
| destination | When it started to rain, they ran underneath the bridge.  The car sped away from the tunnel.  | 
  
| contrast between 'between' - 'among' - 'amid' | |
| in relation to two objects | She is standing between two boys. | 
| in relation to more than two objects | She is standing among boys.  The house stands amid trees.  |