Hello, which preposition is correct in this sentence.
Her son died at the front / on the front / in the front.
Thanks in advance.
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Hello, which preposition is correct in this sentence.
Her son died at the front / on the front / in the front.
Thanks in advance.
***NOT A TEACHER*** I think that most Americans would say "died AT the front." But if you refer to a particular front: he died ON the Western Front. (When you read, you should write down in a notebook how native speakers use those three prepositions. Even native speakers don't always agree on which one is "correct.")
Is this an idiom? I've never heard it used in used a way.:-?
I can think of sentences where each preposition is used with 'front', but they all require something more after - the front X.
He died at the front door.
He died on the Western Front - as TheParser gave
He died in the front room.
Apologies if this is an idiom I just don't know of.
Yes, it refers to being in a war, in the thick of the hostilities. At the front.