This list includes 9 Prepositions that start with E, from “east” to “exclusive of”. These words mainly express space, time, or relationships and help you build clear sentences.

Prepositions that start with E are words that link nouns, pronouns, or phrases to other sentence parts. Historically, “east” appears in many place names and poems as a directional and cultural reference.

Below you’ll find the table with Preposition, Definition, Common pairings, and Example.

Preposition: The target word, shown so you can quickly find spelling and the exact form used in examples.

Definition: A concise meaning in simple language, helping you understand how the preposition functions in a sentence.

Common pairings: Typical collocations and complements that show how the preposition commonly appears with nouns or verbs.

Example: A clear sample sentence demonstrating natural usage, so you can model your own sentences confidently.

Prepositions that start with E

PrepositionFormMeaningCommon pairings
exceptsingle-wordnot including; excludingeveryone, the rule, the cost, John
exceptingsingle-wordexcluding (formal/alternative)taxes, the following, certain cases, this item
excludingsingle-wordnot includingtaxes, fees, bonuses, shipping
except fortwo-word phrasewith the exception ofthe delay, minor errors, one person, the rain
exclusive oftwo-word phrasenot including; excludingtax, shipping, duties, VAT
eastsingle-wordtoward or on the east side ofthe river, the city, the coast, the mountains
en routetwo-word phraseon the way; during a journeyto the airport, home, the city, work
ever sincetwo-word phrasefrom that time onwardthe accident, childhood, 1999, the meeting
eresingle-wordbefore (archaic)dawn, sunrise, the battle, morning

Descriptions

except
Used to indicate exclusion or an exception. “Everyone went except John.”
excepting
A slightly more formal or legal variant of except, meaning excluding. “All items, excepting taxes, are listed.”
excluding
Present participle often used as a preposition in lists and notices. “Salary is $50,000, excluding bonuses.”
except for
Common two-word prepositional phrase used to single out an exception. “The day was fine, except for the rain.”
exclusive of
Formal phrase used in financial or technical contexts to show exclusion. “Total is $1,200, exclusive of tax.”
east
Directional preposition indicating location or movement relative to east. “They live east of the river.”
en route
Borrowed French phrase used in English for being in transit. “We’re en route to the airport.”
ever since
Time phrase used to mark a starting point continuing to the present. “I’ve felt better ever since the surgery.”
ere
Archaic or literary preposition meaning before; less common in modern speech. “He arrived ere dawn.”
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