50. Preposition Mastery - About, For, Of, and After. Handling Tasks, Responsibilities, and Follow-Ups (Part 2 of 5) episode artwork

EPISODE · Jan 22, 2026 · 8 MIN

50. Preposition Mastery - About, For, Of, and After. Handling Tasks, Responsibilities, and Follow-Ups (Part 2 of 5)

from Business English Made Easy · host LV Linguistics

Your team member sends you an update saying they'll handle the budget "after the meeting in Friday." You understand what they mean, but something feels off. Or you're drafting an email to leadership about a cross-departmental initiative, and you keep second-guessing whether to write "meeting about the strategy" or "meeting on the strategy." These aren't grammar mistakes that break communication. They're precision gaps that make otherwise competent professionals sound less polished than they actually are.This episode focuses on four prepositions that appear in nearly every professional email, meeting request, and status update you write: about, for, of, and after. Getting these right doesn't just improve clarity. It changes how authoritative you sound when assigning responsibilities, how professional your scheduling language feels, and whether your organizational references land with the precision expected at senior levels.The episode includes email phrases you can adapt immediately, a workplace dialogue showing all four prepositions in natural context, and explanations of why certain patterns sound awkward to native speakers even when they're technically grammatically correct.Resources:Download this episode's worksheet with practice exercises and ready-to-use email templates: lvlinguistics.be/episode50Ready to Practice Your English with Real People?Listening to podcasts is great for learning, but nothing builds confidence like actually speaking. That's where our English practice membership Level Up comes in. It's made especially for professionals just like you.Inside Level Up, you'll find tons of exercises you can do on desktop or mobile, a community of professionals who are working on their English confidence for work and business, daily unlimited live practice sessions you can join anytime, anywhere, and support from our team of coaches who answer questions and track your progress.If you're serious about getting confident with English, keep doing what you're doing right now (studying, listening to podcasts, doing exercises), but don't forget the critical piece: actually speaking. The more you speak, the more confident and comfortable you'll be with the English language.My amazing team of coaches and I are ready to support you in Level Up. Head over to lvlinguistics.be/levelup for more information. I hope to see you on the inside.Rate, Review, & Follow 💜"I love Business English Made Easy. It's so useful!"If that sounds like you, please consider rating and reviewing our show. This helps us support more people in enhancing their business English skills. Rate with five stars and write a review. Let us know what you loved most about the episode!Also, if you haven't done so already, follow the podcast. We're adding bonus episodes to the feed, and if you're not following, you might miss out. Follow now to stay updated!

Your team member sends you an update saying they'll handle the budget "after the meeting in Friday." You understand what they mean, but something feels off. Or you're drafting an email to leadership about a cross-departmental initiative, and you keep second-guessing whether to write "meeting about the strategy" or "meeting on the strategy." These aren't grammar mistakes that break communication. They're precision gaps that make otherwise competent professionals sound less polished than they actually are.This episode focuses on four prepositions that appear in nearly every professional email, meeting request, and status update you write: about, for, of, and after. Getting these right doesn't just improve clarity. It changes how authoritative you sound when assigning responsibilities, how professional your scheduling language feels, and whether your organizational references land with the precision expected at senior levels.The episode includes email phrases you can adapt immediately, a workplace dialogue showing all four prepositions in natural context, and explanations of why certain patterns sound awkward to native speakers even when they're technically grammatically correct.Resources:Download this episode's worksheet with practice exercises and ready-to-use email templates: lvlinguistics.be/episode50Ready to Practice Your English with Real People?Listening to podcasts is great for learning, but nothing builds confidence like actually speaking. That's where our English practice membership Level Up comes in. It's made especially for professionals just like you.Inside Level Up, you'll find tons of exercises you can do on desktop or mobile, a community of professionals who are working on their English confidence for work and business, daily unlimited live practice sessions you can join anytime, anywhere, and support from our team of coaches who answer questions and track your progress.If you're serious about getting confident with English, keep doing what you're doing right now (studying, listening to podcasts, doing exercises), but don't forget the critical piece: actually speaking. The more you speak, the more confident and comfortable you'll be with the English language.My amazing team of coaches and I are ready to support you in Level Up. Head over to lvlinguistics.be/levelup for more information. I hope to see you on the inside.Rate, Review, & Follow 💜"I love Business English Made Easy. It's so useful!"If that sounds like you, please consider rating and reviewing our show. This helps us support more people in enhancing their business English skills. Rate with five stars and write a review. Let us know what you loved most about the episode!Also, if you haven't done so already, follow the podcast. We're adding bonus episodes to the feed, and if you're not following, you might miss out. Follow now to stay updated!

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50. Preposition Mastery - About, For, Of, and After. Handling Tasks, Responsibilities, and Follow-Ups (Part 2 of 5)

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This episode was published on January 22, 2026.

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Your team member sends you an update saying they'll handle the budget "after the meeting in Friday." You understand what they mean, but something feels off. Or you're drafting an email to leadership about a cross-departmental initiative, and you...

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