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Learning Strategiesby FlashRecall Team

Preposition Flash Cards: 7 Powerful Tricks To Finally Stop Making Grammar Mistakes

Preposition flash cards work way better when you ditch single words, use fill‑in‑the‑blank sentences, group patterns, and let spaced repetition do the heavy...

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Tired of mixing up “in”, “on”, and “at”? These preposition flashcard strategies will fix that for good and make English feel way more natural.

Why Preposition Flash Cards Work So Well (If You Use Them Right)

Prepositions are annoying.

“In the bus” or “on the bus”?

“At night” or “in the night”?

“On Monday” or “in Monday”? (Spoiler: it’s on.)

This is exactly where preposition flash cards shine: you get quick, focused practice on tiny pieces of grammar that you keep messing up.

And if you want to make this way easier, use an app like Flashrecall:

👉 https://apps.apple.com/us/app/flashrecall-study-flashcards/id6746757085

Flashrecall lets you:

  • Make flashcards instantly from text, images, PDFs, YouTube links, or just typing
  • Use built-in spaced repetition so the app tells you when to review
  • Practice active recall instead of just rereading
  • Chat with your flashcards if you’re unsure about something
  • Study offline on iPhone or iPad
  • Start for free and keep things simple and fast

Let’s walk through how to use preposition flash cards in a way that actually fixes your mistakes long-term.

Step 1: Stop Making Single-Word Preposition Cards

Most people make flashcards like this:

  • Front: in
  • Back: preposition of place / time

That’s… not helpful.

Prepositions don’t live alone. They live in phrases and patterns.

So instead, make cards with real sentences or short phrases.

Better Preposition Flashcard Examples

  • Front: I’ll see you ___ Monday.
  • Back: on Monday.
  • Front: She’s interested ___ learning Spanish.
  • Back: interested in learning Spanish.
  • Front: He apologized ___ being late.
  • Back: apologized for being late.

On Flashrecall, you can quickly type these in as manual cards, or even paste a whole text and generate cards from it automatically. The app focuses you on recalling the missing preposition, not just recognizing it.

Step 2: Use “Fill-in-the-Blank” For Real Active Recall

Active recall is just a fancy way of saying: you try to remember before you see the answer.

For prepositions, the best format is cloze deletion (fill-in-the-blank).

How to Structure These Cards

Instead of this:

> Front: “She is good at math.”

> Back: at

Use this:

> Front: She is good ___ math.

> Back: at

Your brain is forced to think:

“Good… in? at? on? with? Hmm… oh right, good at.”

That tiny struggle is what makes your memory stronger.

In Flashrecall, you can:

  • Paste a sentence
  • Highlight the preposition
  • Turn it into a fill-in-the-blank card in seconds

So you don’t waste time formatting — you just learn.

Step 3: Group Cards By Preposition Pattern (Not Alphabetically)

Instead of random chaos like:

  • at the bus stop
  • in the morning
  • on the table
  • for two hours
  • at work

Group your cards by pattern or meaning, like:

1. Time Prepositions

  • at 5 pm
  • at night
  • in the morning
  • in July
  • on Monday
  • on my birthday

2. Place Prepositions

  • at the station
  • in the car
  • on the bus
  • in the room
  • on the wall

3. Verb + Preposition

  • depend on
  • listen to
  • wait for
  • apologize for
  • believe in

You can tag your cards in Flashrecall as “time”, “place”, “verb + prep”, etc.

Later, if you keep messing up time prepositions, you can just review that tag.

Step 4: Use Real-Life Sentences, Not Textbook Nonsense

Textbook sentence:

> The cat is on the mat.

Flashrecall automatically keeps track and reminds you of the cards you don't remember well so you remember faster. Like this :

Flashrecall spaced repetition reminders notification

Real-life sentence:

> I’ll meet you at the station, not in the station entrance.

You remember better when the sentence feels like something you’d actually say.

Where To Get Real Sentences

  • Messages from friends (screenshot and turn into cards with Flashrecall’s image-to-flashcard feature)
  • Articles, blogs, or tweets
  • YouTube videos (Flashrecall can make cards from YouTube links)
  • Your own mistakes from writing or speaking

In Flashrecall you can:

  • Import a screenshot of a chat → highlight the sentence → make a card
  • Paste part of an article → auto-generate cards
  • Create cards from audio if you’re learning by listening

So you’re not just memorizing “fake English” — you’re learning from the real stuff you actually read and hear.

Step 5: Let Spaced Repetition Do the Heavy Lifting

The biggest problem with flashcards isn’t making them.

It’s remembering to review them.

If you just shuffle through a stack randomly, you either:

  • Review too much (wasting time)
  • Or forget completely (wasting effort)

Spaced repetition fixes that. It shows you cards:

  • Right before you’re about to forget them
  • Less and less often as you get better

Flashrecall has built-in spaced repetition and reminders, so:

  • You don’t have to decide what to review
  • You don’t have to set your own schedule
  • The app pings you when it’s time to study

You just open the app, hit study, and your preposition cards show up exactly when your brain needs them.

Step 6: Add “Near Miss” Cards For Mistakes You Keep Making

This is a powerful trick most people never use.

Whenever you make a mistake with a preposition, don’t just say “oh okay” and move on.

Turn that mistake into its own flashcard.

Example

You say or write:

> I’m good in English.

Correct is:

> I’m good at English.

Make a card:

  • Front: I’m good ___ English.
  • Back: at (NOT “in”)

You can even add a note on the back:

> ❌ not “good in English”

> ✅ “good at English”

In Flashrecall, after you answer a card incorrectly, you can quickly edit it or add a related one. Over time, your deck becomes a collection of your personal problem areas, not generic grammar stuff.

Step 7: Use Flashrecall’s “Chat with Your Flashcards” When You’re Confused

Sometimes you’ll think:

> “Wait, why is it on the bus but in the car?”

> “Why do we say ‘at school’ but ‘in school’ in some contexts?”

Instead of going down a Google rabbit hole, you can just chat with the card in Flashrecall.

You can:

  • Ask for more examples: “Give me 5 more sentences with ‘on the bus’.”
  • Ask for explanations: “Explain the difference between ‘in school’ and ‘at school’.”
  • Ask for translations or comparisons in your native language (if helpful)

This turns your flashcards into a mini tutor. You’re not just memorizing… you’re actually understanding.

How to Build a Killer Preposition Deck in Flashrecall (Step-by-Step)

Here’s a simple setup you can follow today:

1. Pick One Focus Area

For example: time prepositions (in, on, at).

2. Collect 20–30 Real Sentences

From:

  • A blog post
  • A YouTube video
  • Your textbook
  • Your own writing

Paste or import them into Flashrecall.

3. Turn Them Into Fill-in-the-Blank Cards

For each sentence, blank out the preposition:

  • I’ll see you ___ Monday.
  • She was born ___ 1998.
  • The meeting is ___ 3 pm.
  • We usually go out ___ night.

Highlight the preposition → convert to cloze → done.

4. Tag Them

Use tags like:

  • `preposition-time`
  • `preposition-place`
  • `verb-preposition`

This makes it easy to review just what you need.

5. Study 5–10 Minutes a Day

Flashrecall will:

  • Show you cards at the right time
  • Remind you to study with notifications
  • Work offline if you’re on the bus/train/plane

In a week or two, you’ll notice those “tiny grammar mistakes” happening less and less.

Paper Flash Cards vs. Apps: Why Flashrecall Makes This Way Easier

You can use paper cards, but:

  • You have to shuffle and organize them manually
  • No reminders
  • No spaced repetition
  • No quick edits or tags
  • No chatting with cards when you’re confused

With Flashrecall:

  • You create cards in seconds from text, images, PDFs, audio, or YouTube
  • The app handles spaced repetition automatically
  • You can study anywhere, even offline
  • It works for any language, exam, school subject, university, medicine, business — not just prepositions
  • It’s fast, modern, and free to start

Grab it here:

👉 https://apps.apple.com/us/app/flashrecall-study-flashcards/id6746757085

Final Thoughts: Prepositions Don’t Have to Be a Nightmare

If prepositions feel random and impossible, it’s usually because:

  • You’re trying to “memorize rules” instead of patterns in real sentences
  • You’re not using active recall
  • You’re not reviewing at the right time

Preposition flash cards fix all of that — especially when you:

1. Use real, useful sentences

2. Turn them into fill-in-the-blank cards

3. Save your actual mistakes as new cards

4. Let spaced repetition handle the schedule

5. Use a smart tool like Flashrecall to make the whole process easy

Do this for a few weeks and you’ll start feeling what’s correct, not just guessing.

Set up your first 20 preposition flash cards today, toss them into Flashrecall, and let your future self enjoy sounding way more natural in English.

Frequently Asked Questions

What's the fastest way to create flashcards?

Manually typing cards works but takes time. Many students now use AI generators that turn notes into flashcards instantly. Flashrecall does this automatically from text, images, or PDFs.

Is there a free flashcard app?

Yes. Flashrecall is free and lets you create flashcards from images, text, prompts, audio, PDFs, and YouTube videos.

How do I start spaced repetition?

You can manually schedule your reviews, but most people use apps that automate this. Flashrecall uses built-in spaced repetition so you review cards at the perfect time.

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