“In vs Into” — Can You Get All 5 Right? (Preposition Quiz)

As an English teacher, I have been creating content for both Korean learners and global English learners. This blog is where I share the grammar rules I cover in my lessons — and today’s quiz is about two words that look almost identical but mean something very different: in and into.

No rules first. Just the quiz. 👇


Quiz Time! 🎯


Question 1: “She walked ___ the room.”

a) in b) into c) both work


Question 2: “He is sitting ___ the car.”

a) into b) in c) both work


Question 3: “The cat jumped ___ the box.”

a) in b) into c) both work


Question 4: “I left my keys ___ the kitchen.”

a) into b) in c) both work


Question 5: “She poured the water ___ the glass.”

a) in b) into c) both work


Drop your answers in the comments! 👇


Now let’s check! 🎉


Q1: b) into “She walked into the room.” → INTO = movement from outside to inside (she was outside, now she’s inside)


Q2: b) in “He is sitting in the car.” → IN = already inside, no movement (he’s already there)


Q3: b) into “The cat jumped into the box.” → INTO = movement (the cat moved from outside the box to inside)


Q4: b) in “I left my keys in the kitchen.” → IN = location, no movement (the keys are just sitting there)


Q5: b) into “She poured the water into the glass.” → INTO = movement (water moved from outside to inside the glass)


The simple rule 🔍

  • IN = already inside, no movement → state
  • INTO = moving from outside to inside → action

Ask yourself: is something moving or staying? Moving → INTO Staying → IN


How did you score?

  • 5/5 → Grammar pro! 🏆
  • 3-4/5 → Almost there! 💪
  • 1-2/5 → Now you know — try again! 😊

Drop your score in the comments! 👇


Want to learn more natural English?

Hi, I’m Yehs Sam 👋 I have been teaching English and creating content to help learners sound more natural and confident — for both Korean learners and global English learners.

🐢⚡ Turtle ZeusSlow but surely, we get there.


Is there a slang word or English expression you’ve always wanted to know? Drop it in the comments below — I’d love to cover it in my next post!

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