In and Inside
In and inside are the same in many
cases. You can say:
§ We are in the
house.
= We are inside the house.
= We are inside the house.
§ The clothes are in the
closet.
= The clothes are inside the closet.
= The clothes are inside the closet.
The word inside implies that the thing is physically
enclosed – it is in a container (a box, a vehicle, a building with walls, etc.)
This means that when talking about location, time, being included, or other
situations where you are not physically surrounded, you should
use in, not inside:
§
I live in Australia.
§ My birthday is in July.
§ He plays guitar in a
band.
Into
The word into implies movement or transformation:
§ She jumped into the
swimming pool.
§ We went into the
house.
§ The car crashed into a
telephone pole.
§ The caterpillar
turned into a butterfly.
With the verbs
put, throw, drop, and fall, you can use either into or in:
§ He put the
card into/in his pocket.
§ I threw the
paper cup into/in the trash.
§ She lost her
balance and fell into/in the river.
Within
The word within means “inside the limits” – and in this
case the limits are non-physical. They can be limits of time or distance, or an
area of understanding:
§ The results will
be delivered within fourteen days.
§ Most car
accidents occur within five miles of home.
We also have some expressions using within:
§ within earshot = at a
distance where you are able to hear something (such as a conversation)
§ within reason = to the
degree that good judgment would allow
§ within reach /
within one’s grasp = able to be taken with your hand, or able to be
accomplished
You can also use within to describe a person’s inner
feelings (in this case, you can also use “inside”):
§ He tried to hide
the anger burning within/inside him.
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