Phrasal Verbs and other multi-word verbs
Phrasal verbs are part of a large group of verbs called "multi-word
verbs". Phrasal verbs and other multi-word verbs are an important part
of the English language. Multi-word verbs, including phrasal verbs, are
very common, especially in spoken English. A multi-word verb is a verb
like "pick up", "turn on" or "get on with". For convenience, many people
refer to all multi-word verbs as phrasal verbs. These verbs consist of a
basic verb + another word or words. The other word(s) can be
prepositions and/or adverbs. The two or three words that make up
multi-word verbs form a short "phrase" - which is why these verbs are
often all called "phrasal verbs".
The important thing to remember is that a multi-word verb is still a
verb. "Get" is a verb. "Get up", is also a verb, a different verb. "Get"
and "get up" are two different verbs. They do not have the same
meaning. So you should treat each multi-word verb as a separate verb,
and learn it like any other verb. Look at these examples. You can see
that there are three types of multi-word verb:
single-word verb | look | direct your eyes in a certain direction | You must look before you leap. | |
multi-word verbs | prepositional verbs | look after | take care of | Who is looking after the baby? |
phrasal verbs | look up | search for and find information in a reference book | You can look up my number in the telephone directory. | |
phrasal-prepositional verbs | look forward to | anticipate with pleasure | I look forward to meeting you. |
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