Learn English – Is “now” a “preposition”

adverbsgrammarparts-of-speechprepositions

My question starts from this question which asks about difference between currently and right now, which is not that complicated. However, in the middle of exchanging comments, I found a few points in relation to classifying adverbs and prepositions that I would like to ask here.

Wikipedia (I looked through other definitions, but it looks clearer) defines a preposition as:

The word preposition comes from Latin: prae ("before") and Latin:
ponere ("to put")
. This refers to the situation in Latin and Greek
(and in English), where such words are placed before their complement,
and are hence "pre-positioned".

A preposition comes before its complement; a postposition comes after
its complement
. English generally has prepositions rather than
postpositions – words such as in, under and of precede their objects,
as in in England, under the table, of Jane – although there are a
small handful of exceptions including "ago" and "notwithstanding", as
in "three days ago" and "financial limitations notwithstanding".

I am not asking a question about why ago could be considered as a preposition like notwithstanding which can be pre-positive and post-positive at the same time. I can guess why ago could be classified as a preposition, however, dictionaries say it is an adverb, not a preposition. I know dictionaries are for general public, not for grammarians.

The previous question about now seems to be more focused on the dual usages of now as an adverb and a noun. However, grammars like Oxford Modern English Grammar list now as a preposition (p.76).

  1. Now, why in the world is now a preposition?

  2. If now is a preposition, how about the adverb immediately?

  3. Can you call a word (part of speech) that takes no complement (or object) preposition? Then, why do we use the word preposition for such words? Wouldn't it be better if we use a brand-new grammatical term?

Best Answer

"Now" is not a preposition. It is most commonly used as an adverb. "We are leaving now." "Now" modifies "leaving". It says when we are leaving. It is a word that modifies a verb, and is therefore an adverb.

It is also used as a noun. "Now is a good time to start". "He lives in the here and now." It refers to a specific time.

It can be used as a conjunction. "Now listen to me." "Now, here's the interesting part."

I just checked several dictionaries and some mention it can also be used as an adjective. "The band has a really now sound." That's very informal though.

None says it can be a preposition. There may be some sentence you can construct where you use "now" as a preposition and it makes sense. I can't think of one off the top of my head.

I see that one of the answers on the question you cite refers to "right now" as a prepositional phrase. I think that's incorrect. I'd call it an adverbial phrase -- precisely because it does not include a preposition. Note that in the comments following, many dispute calling this a prepositional phrase. I haven't checked the references given. If some linguists are redefining "preposition", well, let's just say that that is not what I or my kids were taught in school, nor what any dictionary I've checked says.