Learn English – “along the river” vs “alongside the river”

prepositions

In a question on "along" vs "alongside", I have seen this question and the correct answer on the web site makes me confused.

http://www.learnex.in/difference-between-along-and-alongside-free-english-lesson/

The question is: I enjoyed my walk _________________ the river.

a) along
b) alongside

I selected "…along the river" as the correct answer, but on the web site it is shown as wrong and the correct answer is "alongside".

How can that be? I still do not agree, because I have studied the difference between the two. "along" is just the right preposition for thin and long places like road, path, street, beach etc".

So, why would the correct answer be "alongside" which simply means "next to"? Do you not think "along" seems to be better fitting?

Regards,

Note: I would be more than gratefull, if somebody show it to me in a video, like "a walk along the river" and "a walk alongside the river". Maybe I can understand the how "a walk along the river" and "a walk alongside the river" would take place.

Best Answer

This may be tricky at times cause they are so close in meaning. The main point about the "next to" definition is to understand that in most cases "along" means "forming a line (that has a start point and an end point)" whereas "alongside" simply means "next to; beside" - it doesn't imply that something forms a straight line. - Alongside vs Along

There however is a bug in this difference since "along" can also mean "going lengthwise":

  • We were having a romantic walk along the river.
  • We were having a romantic walk alongside the river.

This also concerns other definitions which eventually are alike.

Eventually both the choices are correct. However, people most often say "along the bank of the river" (not alongside) or "along the river coast" (not alongside).

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