Here you’ll find 3 Prepositions that start with Q that begin with Q, organized from “qua” to “quoad hoc”. Many are Latin borrowings and appear mainly in formal, legal, or academic contexts.

Prepositions that start with Q are prepositions whose head word begins with the letter Q. Most come from Latin, with notable examples like “qua” used in philosophy and law.

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

Preposition: Shows the preposition itself in quotes so you can identify the exact word or phrase.

Definition: Provides a short meaning of the preposition in plain language to help you understand its use.

Common pairings: Lists three to five typical complements or collocations so you can see real-world usage patterns.

Example: One clear sentence shows the preposition in context, helping you test meaning and natural phrasing.

Notes: Flags archaic, regional, or rare status and gives brief usage tips to guide your choices.

Prepositions that start with Q

PrepositionFormGrammar roleCommon pairings
quasingle-wordlinks noun phrase to role or capacityexpert, judge, parent, role, capacity
quoadsingle-word; [Scots/legal, rare]links noun phrase to topic or respect; shows regardlaw, rights, matters, case, statute
quoad hocmulti-word prepositional phrase; [rare/legal]specifies purpose or limitation of an orderinjunction, order, purpose, hearing, ruling

Descriptions

qua
Means “in the capacity of” or “as.” Example sentence: “She spoke qua expert on the committee.”
quoad
Latin-derived preposition meaning “as to” or “with regard to.” Example sentence: “Quoad the contract, the parties reached agreement.” [rare][Scots/legal]
quoad hoc
Latin legal phrase meaning “for this purpose,” used to limit orders or decisions. Example sentence: “The injunction was granted quoad hoc.” [rare][legal]
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