How to Use IN, ON, AT Correctly for Place and Time

This video explains the correct usage of the prepositions IN, ON, and AT for indicating place and time in English. It presents them as levels of detail: IN for general/inside contexts, ON for surfaces/specific days, and AT for exact points. The lesson covers common applications and mistakes, including examples with locations like home, school, and hospital, plus time expressions. A practice quiz reinforces the concepts to help learners master these fundamental prepositions.

Full English Transcript of: You’re Probably Using IN, ON, AT Wrong (Let’s Fix It!) (+ Quick Quiz!)

Hey everyone, welcome back to the channel. So, today we're tackling something small but secretly powerful. Yep, we're talking about prepositions in, on, and at when we use them to talk about place and time. Why do we say in a room but on a bus and somehow at a party? Like, are we inside, on top, or just emotionally present? Let's fix this once and for all. They are tiny little words but mess them up and suddenly you are at a bus, on a room, and somehow in Monday and everyone's confused. Now, before we even go into rules, here's a little secret. Think of these three as

levels of detail. In equals big, general, inside. On equals surface, line, or a specific day. At equals very specific, exact, and point. It's like zooming in on a map, country, city, exact address. So, that's basically how these prepositions work. So, let's start with in. Think of in as being inside something, physically or conceptually. So, how do we use in to talk about time? We use in for longer periods of time. We say, for example, in 2025, the whole year. In July, the whole month. In the morning, this is a big chunk of a day. Or in the past, like whole past. You're not pointing to a precise moment. You're

talking about a chunk of time. Now, how do we use it to talk about place? We use it when we're inside something. For example, in a room, in a car, in a city, in a building, in a country. If you can imagine being surrounded by walls, space, or boundaries, use in. Basically, if it feels big and spacious, go with in. I'm in the room, she's in the car, we live in Chicago. Next up is on. So, if in is inside, then on is sitting nicely on top. So, how do we use on to talk about time? Use on for a specific days and dates. For example, you can say on Monday, a specific day. On my birthday, also a specific day. On July 4th, a specific date. Or on a Friday night. It's not a big chunk anymore,

it's a clearly defined day. Okay, so how do we use it to talk about place? Use on for surfaces. If it's touching the surface, like your phone on your desk, on is your guy. For example, we say on the table, on the floor, on the wall, on the screen. If it's sitting, hanging, or resting on something, we use on. The phone is on the table. He is on the wall, like um Spider-Man. I'm on the bus. A quick little tip. So, we say in a car but on a bus, train, or plane. Why? Because buses and trains or planes feel more like surfaces that you can stand or walk on. Yep, English likes to

keep things interesting. I know you're technically inside of the bus, but English said, "Nope, you're on it." I don't know. Don't argue with the bus. Now, let's talk about at, the most precise one. So, how do we use it to talk about time? We use at for exact times. For example, at 3:00 p.m., at noon, at midnight, at 7:30. This is the exact point, no guessing. Now, how do we use it to talk about place? So, we use at for specific points or locations. When you're thinking of a place as a point, not a space. For example, at the bus stop, at the door, at school, at the

entrance, at work. You're not focusing on the inside, you're focusing on the location as a dot on a map. Okay, think of at as a pin on a map, very exact. I'm at the store. She's at school. We're at the party. Now, let's use all of them in one sentence, shall we, for a little comparison? So, we can say something like, "I'll meet you at the cafe on Monday in the morning." In the morning because it's a big time period. The morning is a big chunk of the day. On Monday because it's a specific day. And at the cafe because this is the exact place. See that? All three working together like a dream. Now, let's fix some classic common mistakes that English learners make. And no shame to

you if you've ever made these mistakes, we've all been there because we are all here learning English. Learning, it's a process and mistakes are inevitable and are okay because this is how we actually learn. Some people might say in Monday, it's completely incorrect, it's supposed to be on Monday. At the morning, completely incorrect, it's supposed to be in the morning. In the table, no, no, no, not in the table but on the table. Now, let's use them in the same sentence and compare them and see how this changes the meaning of the sentence. I'm in the house, meaning inside of the house, right? Somewhere inside. I'm at the house, I'm just there. You're near,

around, or at the place, not necessarily inside it. You're at that location, you know, like a point on a map. But we don't know exactly where inside the house or what you're doing. I'm on the house, call for help, probably. Okay, the next one. "I'll see you in the morning," sometime during the morning time. "I'll see you at 8:00 a.m." Well, this is the exact time. "And I'll see you on Monday," a specific day. Now, let's dive a little deeper into these prepositions that people use with specific words like school, work, hospital, etc. Because these can be very confusing sometimes.

Let's talk about at school versus in school. You can hear both literally every single day. So, when we say at school, we focus on location as a point or activity. So, you can say, "I'm at school," and this will mean you're there studying, teaching, or working. When we say in school, the focus is on being a student, like a status. "My son is in school." He's enrolled. Okay, think of it like this. At school is where you are. In school, your life situation. Now, at the hospital versus in the hospital. At the hospital means that you're visiting, working, or just there. "I'm at the

hospital visiting a friend." In the hospital, though, means that you're inside as a patient. "He's in the hospital." Usually, this means something serious. At work versus in work. At work is correct. You can say, "I'm at work." But in work is incorrect. It's never used like this. But you can say something like, "I'm in the office," like I'm physically there, I'm in the office. Or I'm at work, that's like your activity or situation. In the park versus at the park. In the park means that you're inside the park area. You can say something like, "We're in the park walking around." At the park is a general location, like a meeting point. And you can say something like, "Let's

meet at the park." At, pin on a map, in, inside the space. At the park, we don't care if you're inside or outside. The focus is just that place. At home versus in the house. We don't say in the home. Native speakers almost always say at home. It sounds natural, more general. "I'm at home." In the house, on the other hand, of course it is used, it means inside the building. "I'm in the house, not outside the house, right?" Why not in home? Because the word home is special in English. We don't use any articles here, no A or the. And it's used as a general concept place and not as a physical container. And we always say at home. But when home means a type of place, not

your home, we use in. For example, she works in a nursing home. They live in a small home by the lake. We're talking about a type of place or a type of building. At the store versus in the store. At the store, as we now know, means a general location. "I'm at the store." In the store, I'm physically inside. "I'm in the store near the milk." At university versus in university. At university is more common, specifically for American English. In university also used and focus in on being a student. It's a similar idea to school when we're talking about establishments. In bed versus on the bed. I'm sure that you've noticed that sometimes we use the

article the and sometimes we don't. And I'm going to make another video talking specifically about this because if I try to explain this in this video, it's just going to take a whole hour. So we usually say in bed in and without the article the when we're under covers or literally sleeping. I'm in bed. And we say on the bed when we're sitting or lying on top. The cat is on the bed. Here we use the article the because we're talking about a specific bed, right? At the table versus on the table. At the table means sitting at the table eating. On the table on the other hand means that the object is on the surface.

For example, the keys are on the table. Okay, so this was a general explanation and now I have a little quiz for you to practice what you've learned. I'm going to give you sentences without prepositions and you're going to have to figure out which one to use, in, on, or at. And you'll find the answers in the description. But try it by yourself first, please. No peeking. I think you'll need a piece of paper and a pen or pencil and you can write the whole sentence down or just your answer like the number of the sentence and your answer. Okay, first one. I am the car. In, on, or at? Number two. She's waiting the bus stop. We're blank the park near the lake. Let's meet blank the park. The

cat is the table. They are the room. I saw him blank the party last night. She's school right now. I am the school picking up my son. He's the hospital visiting his friend. I'll call you 5:00 p.m. We met blank Monday. She was born 2010. I like to work the morning. The store is closed night. I'll see you the weekend. I'm the bus. He's bed. The picture is the wall. We're a meeting. She's home. They're the bar. Okay, you guys, that is it. Tiny words, but big difference, right? Master these and your English instantly sounds more natural. If this helped, hit that like button, subscribe, and I'll see you in the next video on this channel at your screen.

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