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Grammar

Phrasal Verbs 1: Introduction

What phrasal verbs are, how to form them, and where to place the object

What Is a Phrasal Verb?

A phrasal verb is a verb combined with a short word such as in, on, up, off, out, away, down, back, through, along, forward, over, round, or around.

The combination creates a single unit of meaning. Sometimes the meaning is obvious from the words themselves; other times it is completely different from what you would expect.

Movement: The Meaning Stays Clear

When you pair a movement verb with one of these short words, the meaning usually stays transparent. You can guess what it means.

Phrasal verbExample
get onThe elevator was full. We couldn’t get on.
drive offMy manager jumped in her car and drove off to the client site.
come backHe’s flying to Seoul on Monday and coming back on Thursday.
turn roundI called her name in the hallway, and she turned round.

Special Meanings: You Need to Learn These

Often, the short word changes the verb’s meaning in a way you cannot predict. These are the phrasal verbs you need to memorize.

Phrasal verbMeaningExample
break downstop working (a machine)The printer broke down right before the deadline.
find outdiscoverWe never found out who leaked the report.
take offleave the ground (a plane)Fasten your seatbelt. The plane is about to take off.
give upstop tryingThe project was too complex, but nobody wanted to give up.
get onmanage, doHow did you get on in the interview?
get bymanage with what you haveMy Japanese is basic, but it’s enough to get by during business trips.

Notice that get on appears in both groups. With movement it means to board something. With the special meaning it means to manage or do.

Phrasal Verb + Preposition

Some phrasal verbs are followed by a preposition before their object. The whole combination works as a unit.

ExpressionExample
look up atWe looked up at the scoreboard to check the results.
run away fromYou can’t run away from your responsibilities at work.
keep up withThe market is changing fast. It’s hard to keep up with new regulations.
look forward toI’m looking forward to the team offsite next week.

Object Placement: Two Positions

When a phrasal verb takes an object, you can usually put the object in two places.

  • I turned on the projector. or I turned the projector on.
  • Can you fill in this form? or Can you fill this form in?

Both positions are correct.

Pronoun Rule: Only One Position

When the object is a pronoun (it, them, me, him, her, us), the pronoun must go between the verb and the short word. There is no choice here.

CorrectWrong
I turned it on.I turned on it.
These shoes hurt. I’m going to take them off.take off them
The baby is asleep. Don’t wake her up.wake up her
I need this report, so don’t throw it away.throw away it

This is one of the most common mistakes in spoken and written English. Whenever you use a pronoun, place it before the short word.

Quick Self-Check

Question 1

The copier _____ again, so I called the technician.

Select your answer:

Question 2

I need those headphones. Could you give _____ ?

Select your answer:

Question 3

How did you _____ about the merger? It was supposed to be confidential.

Select your answer:

Question 4

We're _____ the quarterly review meeting next Friday.

Select your answer:

Question 5

The air conditioning is too strong. Can you turn _____ ?

Select your answer:

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