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Obviously you didn’t read it.
3. Estimate proper (good/bad) – (luckily, fortunately, happily, unfortunately, unluckily, etc.).
Fortunately there were few people at the morning surgery.
Unhappily a terrible storm broke out before the travellers had reached their destination.
THE PREPOSITION
§ 245. A preposition is a function word indicating a relation between two notional words. Its semantic
significance becomes evident when different prepositions are used with one and the same word, as in:
to go to the park, to go across the park, to go round the park, to go out of the park, to go through the 
park, etc.
A preposition may altogether change the meaning of the verb:
he shot the officer (he aimed at him and hit him),
he shot at the officer (he aimed at him but probably missed).
Although the tradition of differentiating prepositions from other word classes (conjunctions, and in some
cases adverbs) is well established, it is not always easy to draw the border-line; nearly all one-word
prepositions can also function as adverbs or as conjunctions, their status being determined only syntactically. A
few words - after, before, since, for (with the change of meaning), behind - may function not only as adverbs,
adverbial postpositions, or conjunctions, but also as prepositions. Compare the following groups of sentences:
They sailed up (postposition).
They sailed up the river (preposition).
Everybody was up at the sound of the bell (adverb).
The milk boiled over (postposition).
He presided over the meeting (preposition).
I can’t tolerate such men as him (preposition).
As he was passing the door he turned back (conjunction).
No one saw him but me (preposition).
But no one saw him (conjunction).
He is stronger than me (preposition).
He is stronger than I am (conjunction).
Morphological composition
§ 246. Most of the common English prepositions are simple in structure:
out, in, for, on, about, but (в значении кроме, исключая), against.
Derived prepositions are formed from other words, mainly participles:
excepting, concerning, considering, following, including, during, depending, granted, past, except.
There are also many compound prepositions:
within, outside, upon, onto, throughout, alongside, wherewith, whereof, whereupon, herein, hereafter,
withall.
Composite or phrasal prepositions include a word of another class and one or two prepositions, as in by
virtue of, but for, because of, by means of, instead of, in lieu of, prior to, on account of, abreast of, thanks to,
with reference to, opposite to, in front of, for the sake of, in view of, in spite of, in preference to, in unison with,
for the sake of, except for, due to, in addition to, with regard to, on behalf of, in line with, at variance with.
A composite preposition is indivisible both syntactically and semantically, that is, no element of it can be
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