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ESL forum > Ask for help > Help is needed    

Help is needed



omfp
Portugal

Help is needed
 
Hello!
 
I �m a little bit confused about the preposition to use in the following sentence: "They study in / on a boat."
 
Thanks in advance.
 
Dina

10 May 2011      





Pelletrine
France

In latin languages you are mostly in a means of transport, but in English, yes, you are in a car; but, you are on a boat and on a plane.
So I think you should say �They study on a boat.
Hope it helps.
... Let �s see what a native speaker would say ;o))

10 May 2011     



sirhaj
Malaysia

I think it is "on" because car is a small closed space so we are "in" a car but boat is wide open while plane, although it is a closed space but it is way up in the air.

Sirhajwan

11 May 2011     



cgaiato
Portugal

   it �s "on" in the sense that a boat is a public transportation..if it �s a private boat, I believe you could say "in"..like we say "in the car"..

11 May 2011     



mariec
Spain

  
 
  We say; they study on a boat.

11 May 2011     



Apodo
Australia

The sentence  �They study on a boat � is correct, but �in a boat � can also be used, especially for small boats.
There is a book called �Three Men in a Boat �.
 
They went out on the lake in a boat.
They travelled down the Amazon in a boat to study rare fish.

11 May 2011     



chrissmolder
Australia

LOL--What a coincidence!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!  I live on a boat and was trying to help my kids with a very similar phrase in French this very morning!!!  We came up with this:

J �habite sur un bateau.

I realize this is an English site--but maybe one of our French speaking colleagues can let me know if this is right??? 


As for the English version, I would prefer to say:

I study on a boat.

I would use �in the boat � for if I wanted to point out where on the boat someone was at a given moment.  For example, we are all on the boat we might have this:

question: Where �s Tristan? 
answer: Oh--he �s inside (the boat).

Or, maybe this:

question: Where �s the life jacket?
answer: It �s in the boat.

However, I still think �on the boat � is much more common.

11 May 2011     



britishschwa
Cayman Islands

Both of them are correct!


11 May 2011     



chrissmolder
Australia

Here are some more opinions...they actually are very similar to all of ours. 

http://forum.wordreference.com/showthread.php?t=503621


11 May 2011