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My English Language
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English Phrasal VerbsPhrasal verbs are usually created by combining a verb with a preposition. Phrasal verbs can often cause problems for English language learners, as the words are put together in a new way to form a new meaning. Another confusing aspect of phrasal verbs is that they can sometimes be split up. Examples: To take off (aeroplane’s initial passage into the air) To strike off (to ban/disassociate) To break down (to stop functioning or to become upset) To break (something) down (to divide into smaller parts) To cry off (to cancel) To get on (to do well at something) To call back (to return a (phone) call) To blow up (to explode or to inflate with air by mouth (a balloon)) To pass on (to receive something then give it to someone else) To put off (to postpone or to discourage) To put up with (to endure under duress) To check in/out (to arrive at a hotel or airport/ to leave a hotel) To embark upon (to begin) To get together (to meet up) To get on (to do well/succeed at something) To back (someone) up (to support someone in an argument) To cheer up (to become happier) To fill in (to complete a form) To get over something (to recover from something)
Some more phrasal verbs:
In telephone calls we talk about:
These kind of idiomatic situations mean that the meanings of individual words cannot always be deduced from unrelated context. Speaker will only meet these phrases in certain contexts, often social or non-formal. Some idiomatic phrasal verbs in context:to get out of (doing something) to avoid doing something In context:
to hang on to wait a moment In context:
to be put off (by something) to be discouraged In context:
to put (something) off / to put off (something) to procrastinate/delay something In context:
to feel under the weather and to come down with something to feel as though you are getting ill
to work out to decipher In context:
to work out (verb) OR to have a workout (noun) to do physical exercise In context:
Some slang idiomatic expressions in context:to throw a sickie / to chuck a sickie to pretend to be ill to take a day off work In context:
to be in the dog house to be in trouble with someone / when someone is angry with you In context:
to milk something to exaggerate something (for sympathy) In context:
For more phrasal verbs and idiomatic expressions, please click here
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