is when a preposition
“When” is not a preposition; it is usually a subordinating conjunction and can also function as a relative adverb or an interrogative adverb.
What “when” usually is
-
Subordinating conjunction (very common)
- Introduces a time clause.
- Examples:
- “Call me when you arrive.”
- “When the movie ended, we left.”
In both, “when” links a dependent time clause (“when you arrive”) to a main clause, which is the job of a conjunction, not a preposition.
-
Relative adverb
- Refers back to a time noun and introduces a clause.
- Example: “I remember the day when we first met.”
Here, “when” modifies the verb “met” and relates back to “day”; it behaves like a relative adverb.
-
Interrogative adverb
- Used in questions about time.
- Examples:
- “When will you go?”
- “Since when have you lived here?”
Why “when” is not a preposition
Prepositions must have an object (usually a noun or pronoun) and form a prepositional phrase:
- “at noon,” “before dinner,” “after the meeting.”
By contrast, “when” does not take a noun/pronoun object; it introduces a full clause with a subject and verb:
- Not: “when noon” (prepositional pattern)
- But: “when it was noon” (conjunction pattern).
So although prepositions can indicate time (at, in, on, before, after, during), “when” itself is not classified as a preposition in standard English grammar.