Expressing WHY something is done
Prepositions of Purpose explain why or for what reason an action is done.
What is it?
Expressing WHY something is done
| Word | Meaning | Example |
|---|---|---|
| for | The purpose, goal, or intended use | "This cup is for coffee." / "She studies for a better future." |
| to (+ infinitive) | The goal that drives the action | "I exercise to stay healthy." / "She left early to catch the train." |
| because of | Caused by something (followed by noun/pronoun) | "The flight was delayed because of bad weather." |
| due to | Caused by (more formal, followed by noun) | "Class was cancelled due to the strike." |
| for the sake of | For the benefit or purpose of | "He did it for the sake of his family." |
| in order to | Emphasised purpose (formal) | "She studied hard in order to pass." |
| so as to | Emphasised purpose (formal) | "Speak clearly so as to be understood." |
[!NOTE]
"because of" and "due to" are followed by nouns. "because" (without "of") is followed by a full clause.