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Questions about Prepositions again

hirashin

Sempai
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8 Apr 2004
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Dear native English speakers,
which preposition could be put in each blank?
(a) Her father was shocked ( ) her final decision.
(b) He was excited ( ) the result of the game.
(c1) They were satisfied ( ) the result of the game.
(c2) They were happy ( ) the result of the game.
(c3) They were pleased ( ) the result of the game.

Thanks in advance.

Hirashin
 
(a) Her father was shocked (by) her final decision.
(b) He was excited (by) the result of the game.
(c1) They were satisfied (with) the result of the game.
(c2) They were happy (with) the result of the game.
(c3) They were pleased (with) the result of the game.
 
Thanks, Ikumia and johnnyG.
It seems johnny G has a different view. In (a) and (b), would "at" or "with" sound off to you, johnnyG?
 
Thanks, johnnyG and OoTmaster.
Is it that both "at" and "by" would be possible in (b)?
 
Thanks, johnnyG and OoTmaster.
Is it that both "at" and "by" would be possible in (b)?

In that link I posted, it seems that the deciding factor is whether the speaker (and people like me, who are looking at this sentence) are seeing it as a passive construction, or something else (that closely resembles a passive construction, but is also quite similar to other expressions/phrasings that are not passive).

I see (b) as a passive, so I chose by for the blank:
--The result of the game excited him.
--He was excited by the result of the game.

If I use "got" instead of the usual passive version of "to be", it sounds better:
He got excited at the result of the game.
("The result of the game got him excited") < not a passive

The sentence pair for that would be something like:
The result of the game caused him to get excited.
 
Well, I'll reject "about" in the (a) case, but accept it for (b):

**Her father was shocked about her final decision.
He was excited about the result of the game.
 
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