Page 235 - Advanced English Grammar in Use
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P r e p o s i t i o n s  a f t e r  v e r b s  ( 3 )



                care about/for  We  use  either  care about  or  care  for to talk about feeling affection  for
                someone:
                  •  If you  really cared about/for me, you wouldn't spend so much time away from home.
                  •  Jim and Ann are always together. They seem to  care about/for each other a lot.
                care about  We  use  care about to talk about something we are  (not) concerned about:
                  •  Frank  cared about his clothes more than anything else.
                  •  He doesn't seem to  care  about the  effect smoking has  on him.
                care for  We  use  care for to say that we look after someone or something and keep them in
                good health or condition. We can use take  care of in the same way:
                  •  Jean  cared for her disabled mother until her death last year,  (or Jean took  care of...)
                  •  You need to consider how easy it will  be to  care for the garden,  (or ...to take  care of...)
                We  also  use  care  for to  mean  'like', particularly in negative  sentences, and to mean 'want'  in
                offers.  Both  these  uses  of care  for are  rather formal:
                  •  I don't care for the theatre much.  •  Would you care for a cup of coffee?
                care + no preposition  We use care with no preposition before how, if, what, when, etc. to
                mean that something is  (not)  considered important or  significant:
            O      •  I must buy it. I don't care how much it costs.
            •     •  He often walks along the street singing loudly.  He doesn't seem to  care who is around.
                  •  I don't  care if you're busy.  I need the car today!
                shout/point/throw at/to  You  shout at someone because you are angry with them:
                  •  Don't shout at me, I'm doing my best!
                You  shout to  someone who  is  a  long way  from you  so that they can hear:
                  •  The taxi driver shouted to someone across the street.  'Is the station near here?'
                We  use point something at when we aim a knife, camera,  finger, etc.  in a particular direction:
                  •  She pointed the knife at me and started to laugh.
                When you point  at or point to something,  you  show where  something is  by holding out your
                finger  (we can also  use point towards):
                  •  The food's over there,'  said Toni,  pointing at/to/towards the corner of the room.
                We  use point to when we  say that  a particular  fact suggests that something  else  is true  or  will
                happen:
                  •  The increase in house prices points to an upturn in the economy.
                We  throw  something to  someone  for them to catch  it:
                  •  Fletcher picked up the ball and threw it back to the goalkeeper.
                We  throw something at something or  someone to try to hit them:
                  •  A monkey was sitting in the tree, throwing nuts at anyone who walked past.
                wonder about  If we wonder about doing something, we think about doing it in the future, or
                say that we want to know about something or someone:
            a      •  I've been wondering about visiting Lynn.
            •     •  John has looked tired recently,  and I've started to wonder about his health.
                wonder at  If we wonder at something, we say that we are surprised at it or impressed  by it.
                This is a rather literary use:
                  •  The children had their faces pressed to the glass of the cage, wondering at the tigers they
                     could  see only inches away on the other side.
              Prepositions after adjectives => IBTtH  Prepositions after verbs (1) and (2) =
              Two- and three-word verbs =
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