Prepone vs Postpone — What’s the Difference? | Confusing Words for Kids
Never confuse prepone and postpone and reschedule again! Visual comparison, memory trick, Hindi explanation, practice & quiz.
Updated: June 5, 2026 · ⏱️ 10 min · Page 17/30 · ⭐⭐ Grade 3-5
🔵🟠 Side-by-Side Comparison
💡 Trick to Remember
🇮🇳 Why Indians Confuse These
Indians logically created ‘prepone’ (pre = before) as the opposite of postpone (post = after). It makes perfect sense! But it’s only used in Indian English. Some Indian dictionaries now include it!
📖 Example Sentences
🔵 prepone
- Aarav learned to use prepone correctly.
- The teacher corrected the prepone usage.
- In Indian English, prepone is used differently.
- Standard English uses prepone this way.
- Priya fixed her prepone mistake.
🟠 postpone
- postpone is the correct alternative.
- Rahul now uses postpone properly.
- The exam expects postpone not prepone.
- Modern English prefers postpone.
- Practice using postpone in sentences.
📢 Read Aloud — Both Words!
- Aarav knows: prepone means one thing, postpone means another!
- Priya used both correctly: prepone here and postpone there.
- The exam tested: “Choose prepone or postpone for each blank.”
- Remember the trick and never confuse prepone and postpone again!
✏️ Fill in the Blank
1. Choose correctly: ___
2. The correct word is ___.
3. Don’t say ___.
4. Say ___ instead.
5. ___ is the proper word.
6. Avoid using ___.
7. The teacher prefers ___.
8. In exams, use ___.
9. ___ sounds professional.
10. Replace ___ with ___.
⚠️ Common Mistakes
❓ Quiz
🤓 Fun Facts
📋 Quick Summary — Screenshot This!
People Also Ask
What’s wrong with ‘prepone’?
⚠️ NOT a standard English word! (Indian English invention) PREPONE doesn’t exist in standard English! Use ‘move forward,’ ‘advance,’ or ‘reschedule to an earlier date’ instead. POSTPONE (post = after) is correct.
Why do Indians say this?
Indians logically created ‘prepone’ (pre = before) as the opposite of postpone (post = after). It makes perfect sense! But it’s only used in Indian English. Some Indian dictionaries now include it!
What to say instead?
Use ‘postpone’ — Delay to a later time: ‘The meeting is postponed to Friday’
👨👩👧 Parent Tips
- 1. 🇮🇳 Explain: ‘This is how we say it in India, but standard English says it differently.’
- 2. 📧 Check office emails for these errors — they’re everywhere!
- 3. 📝 Rewrite 5 Indian English sentences in standard English.
- 4. 🎯 No shame! These aren’t ‘mistakes’ — they’re Indian English. But learning both is powerful.
- 5. 📅 Fix one Indian-ism per week. In a month, your child sounds international!
📚 More on English1to5.com
❓ FAQ
What’s wrong with ‘prepone’?
⚠️ NOT a standard English word! (Indian English invention) PREPONE doesn’t exist in standard English! Use ‘move forward,’ ‘advance,’ or ‘reschedule to an earlier date’ instead. POSTPONE (post = after) is correct.
Why do Indians say this?
Indians logically created ‘prepone’ (pre = before) as the opposite of postpone (post = after). It makes perfect sense! But it’s only used in Indian English. Some Indian dictionaries now include it!
What to say instead?
Use ‘postpone’ — Delay to a later time: ‘The meeting is postponed to Friday’
Is this tested in exams?
Yes! CBSE/ICSE expect standard English.
Will people understand the Indian version?
In India yes, but internationally it sounds incorrect. Better to learn the standard form.