50 Important Phrasal Verbs in English

Vanessa:
Hi, I’m Vanessa from SpeakEnglishWithVanessa.com.

Are you ready to master the top 50 phrasal
verbs?

Yes, let’s do it.

Have you ever been listening to an English
conversation but you just can’t figure out

what they’re saying?

You know the individual words, but the meaning
just doesn’t add up.

If you’ve been putting off learning phrasal
verbs, you may want to check out today’s lesson.

It will take you from huh to bring it on in
no time.

So what are phrasal verbs?

Well, phrasal verbs are a two or three-part
verb like this.

There is a normal verb try plus a second part.

That second part could be called a participle,
could be called a preposition, it doesn’t

really matter.

That second part is what makes this a phrasal
verb.

To try is different than to try on or to try
out.

These have different meanings.

So when we use phrasal verbs, it changes the
meaning of the original verb.

Phrasal verbs are incredibly common in daily
conversations, so I hope that these top 50

phrasal verbs in this lesson will help you
to gain some confidence in your speaking but

also to help you understand what other people
are saying.

Because it’s important to know the nuances
and the different meanings of these phrasal

verbs.

Let’s get started with number one.

Number one is to add up, to add up.

Take a look at this sentence, her story didn’t
add up, I think she’s lying.

What do you think this phrasal verb means?

Instead of me directly telling you right away
the meaning of the phrasal verb, I want you

to guess based on the sentence.

That’s what we’re going to be doing for all
50 of these phrasal verbs.

It’s kind of like a 50-question test, hopefully
a fun test.

What do you think add up means here, her story
didn’t add up, I think she’s lying.

This means it didn’t make sense.

Something about it seemed not logical or strange,
it didn’t add up.

We usually use this phrasal verb in a negative
sentence, so that’s what’s happening here.

Her story did not add up.

If you are a student and you go to your teacher
and say, “I’m sorry, I don’t have my homework

finished because last night I got into a car
wreck, and I had to go visit my grandmother

in the hospital.

And then I had my dog, and my dog was eating
my homework.”

This story seems a little bit unbelievable,
so the teacher might think, “Oh, your story

doesn’t add up, I think you’re lying.

You just didn’t do your homework.”

So here, the story doesn’t make sense, it’s
not logical, it doesn’t add up.

Let’s go to number two, to back somebody up.

Take a look at this sentence, my parents backed
me up when I decided to apply for graduate

school.

My parents backed me up, what do you think
this means?

My back, backed me up.

We can imagine your back the part of your
body, it gives you support.

You can’t sit up or stand up or do much without
your back.

So when you back someone up, you give them
support.

My parents supported me when I decided to
apply for graduate school.

This is a great example of how a phrasal verb
can directly replace another maybe more textbook

word.

It’s not wrong to say my parents supported
me, but it’s even better to say my parents

backed me up when I decided to apply for graduate
school.

Phrasal verbs will just make you sound more
comfortable and like you know what you’re

saying.

Let’s take a look at a similar expression,
it’s kind of a bonus tip that I’d like to

add.

What if I said to you I’ve got your back,
I’ve got your back.

Can you guess what this means?

This isn’t a phrasal verb, it’s just a bonus
phrase that is kind of similar to this phrasal

verb.

It means I will support you, I am supporting
you all the way, I got your back.

We often use this when we want to give encouragement
to someone.

So if your friend is maybe going to do something
a little bit risky, you can say, “I will support

you no matter what, I got your back.”

Great, wonderful phrase to use.

Let’s go onto our next phrasal verb, to blow
up.

Take a look at this sentence.

When I told her I couldn’t come to her party,
she blew up.

This is the past tense, this is an irregular
past tense verb.

She blew up, do you think she is really happy?

No.

Instead, this is to become suddenly angry,
she blew up.

So if this is part of your personality to
easily blow up, maybe there’s some deep breaths

you can take, clear your mind a bit.

If you are easily angry, well, maybe you easily
blow up.

I need to calm down a bit.

All right.

Let’s go to our next one, to bring on something,
to bring on something.

50 new phrasal verbs.

Yeah.

Bring it on.

Can you tell by my facial expression it’s
not like the previous one, I’m not blowing

up, I’m not angry?

Instead, I am excited about accepting some
kind of challenge with confidence.

Yes, 50 new phrasal verbs, I can do it, bring
it on.

We often use this to give encouragement to
ourselves.

If you are faced with some kind of challenge
and you want to really encourage yourself,

you could say, “All right.

Bring it on, I can do it.”

To bring up, you shouldn’t bring up politics
in this house unless you’re ready for a long

discussion.

You shouldn’t bring up politics, this means
you shouldn’t mention politics in conversation

unless you want a long discussion because
people here are quite passionate about politics.

To bring up something, what’s something that
you shouldn’t bring up in your country?

What is a topic that you should maybe avoid
in your country?

If you’d like to check out some common taboo
questions in English and especially in the

US that you should avoid, check out this video
that I made up here.

It will help you know which topics you shouldn’t
bring up unless you want to have a long discussion.

To call off.

Instead of calling off the wedding, the couple
decided to elope.

Probably last year if you tried to get married
in your country, it might have been a little

difficult because you couldn’t have big weddings.

Very unfortunate for a lot of people who wanted
to get married last year and probably continuing

this year too.

So what’s your other choice?

Well, you could call off the wedding or you
could elope.

What do you think this phrasal verb means,
to call off the wedding?

It just means to cancel the wedding.

We’re going to cancel the wedding.

Well, maybe you still want to get married,
so you could elope.

If you watched one of my previous videos about
10 funny jokes in English, we talked about

this word elope.

It means to run away with your lover, to get
married maybe in some court house or maybe

in a nice destination, but it’s just the two
of you, you are eloping.

So you could call off your wedding, you could
cancel the wedding or you could elope.

To calm down.

When I have a stressful day, I like to calm
down by taking a nice long walk outside.

Maybe you feel the same way.

When you take a long walk outside, it helps
you to calm down.

This phrasal verb means to relax, to calm
down.

To catch up, to catch up.

I met my friend for lunch to catch up because
we haven’t seen each other in a long time.

Am I running after my friend and catching
her?

No, take a look at this other question.

Want to meet for coffee and catch up?

Want to meet for coffee and catch up?

We’re not running, I’m not inviting you to
have a race.

Instead, this means that you are meeting with
someone who you haven’t seen for a while.

You want to find out what has been happening
in their life recently.

You want to catch up.

Sometimes we say catch up on what’s happening
in your life.

Yeah, I want to catch up on what’s happening,
so tell me all about it.

To catch up on.

To check in.

Look at this sentence, I went to the hotel
to check in while my husband parked the car.

To check in, what am I doing in the hotel?

Check, check, check.

No, this just means that you’re registering
at a hotel.

You’re telling them, “Hey, I’m here,” and
they write in the computer, “All right, Vanessa

is here, here’s your keys.”

This process is called checking in.

To check out.

To check out could have the opposite meaning.

When you leave the hotel, you check out.

You give them back the keys and you say, “I’m
done, I’m leaving.

Thank you so much.”

But I’d like to give you another meaning,
what if you saw this sentence, I’m excited

to check out the new park in my city.

To check out the new park.

Or what if I just said check it out.

Oh, what do you think this means?

This means to see something or to try something.

I can’t wait to see the new park in my city,
I can’t wait to check out the new park in

my city.

Walk all around, see what’s going on.

Great, you’re checking it out.

We sometimes use this phrase all by itself,
check it out.

And this just means look at this.

Check it out, I can’t believe that my son
finished a 100-piece puzzle by himself.

Check it out, look at this.

It’s kind of an expression of surprise and
amazement.

Wow, check it out.

To chip in.

I couldn’t go to the party, but I still wanted
to chip in for a gift.

I want to help participate in something.

It might be with money or with your energy
and time.

Take a look at this, my son likes to chip
in and help me with the garden.

He’s giving his time and energy digging and
weeding and helping me with the garden.

He’s not giving me money, he’s not participating
by giving money.

Instead, it’s his time.

So if you can’t go to a party but you want
to help pay for a special present, you could

give some money to your friend and say, “Here’s
some money because I want to chip in for the

present.”

And they will use that money to help pay for
the present.

It’s a great phrasal verb.

To close down, to close down.

This is different than to close.

Take a look at this.

Because of construction, they closed down
two lanes of the highway.

They closed down two lanes of the highway.

Or during the pandemic, a lot of restaurants
closed down.

Can you get the sense of this phrasal verb?

It means that they closed completely, sometimes
forever.

So the highway, they completely closed two
lanes because they were doing construction

or for the businesses they closed forever
because of the pandemic.

It’s a very unfortunate situation.

To come down with something.

I’m not feeling so well, I think I’m coming
down with something.

Can you guess that this means to start to
feel sick, to come down with something.

We use this for not serious sicknesses.

For example, maybe you have a cold, maybe
you have a sore throat.

Maybe you even have the flu, but it’s not
something so serious.

You might use this as an excuse, “Sorry, I
can’t come to your party, I think I’m coming

down with something.”

We often use something with this phrasal verb
because at the beginning of a sickness, you

might not know what it is.

But you could say, “Sorry, I think I’m coming
down with a cold.”

You could be specific if you know or, “I think
I’m coming down with the flu, I should stay

away from people for a few days.

To come down with some type of sickness.

And the opposite of this, to come down with,
to come up with.

To come up with something, take a look at
this sentence.

I need to come up with a great present for
my mom’s birthday.

Come up with a great present.

Am I picking up a great present?

No.

Take a look at this other sentence, I couldn’t
come up with anything special, so I just baked

a cake.

This means you’re finding an idea.

To come up with a present means that I need
to think about a great idea for a birthday

present, I can’t come up with a great idea.

Or maybe you need to write a thesis paper,
you need to come up with an original idea.

You need to find an idea that is original
for your thesis paper, to come up with something.

To cut back on, to cut back on.

Take a look at this sentence.

I’m trying to cut back on fried food, but
it’s so tasty.

I’m trying to cut back on fried food.

Do you think I’m trying to eat more?

Nope.

Instead, that means you’re trying to do less
of something.

You’re trying to take something out of your
life, to cut back on your consumption of fried

food.

Or you could say it just by itself.

If someone says, “Why aren’t you eating ice
cream?”

You could say, “I’m trying to cut back.”

You don’t need to use on because you don’t
need to repeat I’m trying to cut back on ice

cream because they just said ice cream.

So we know the general topic and context here.

You could say ice cream again, I’m trying
to cut back on ice cream, but you could just

say this by itself, I’m trying to cut back.

This is a really natural thing to say.

To cut off, to cut off.

Cut off my hair?

Nope, that’s not what we’re talking about.

Take a look at this.

The driver in the red car cut me off and almost
caused a wreck.

Cut me off.

It’s kind of an angering situation, you’re
driving, and another car comes in.

And you go, you slam on the brakes or you
have to swerve to the side and be safe.

He has made it so it was kind of ending abruptly
or stopping something quickly.

Usually, we use this in driving, that driver
cut me off or with speaking.

You could say he tried to tell the teacher
his excuse, but she cut him off mid sentence.

Maybe she thought his story didn’t add up.

So as he’s speaking, boom, she cut him off.

Ed, no, no, no, I don’t think that’s an excuse.

No, you need to have your homework.

She cut him off, this idea of ending abruptly
what he was thinking.

To drop by or to drop in.

Take a look at this.

Hey, are you home?

I’m in the neighborhood, and I wanted to drop
by.

If you call your friend and tell your friend
this, I’m in the neighborhood and wanted to

drop by.

Does that mean you want to drop something
on the ground or you want to give something

to your friend?

Nope, it just means I want to see you.

You’re kind of spontaneously going for a visit,
to drop by.

And usually this is a quick visit.

Doesn’t necessarily need to be, but usually
it’s this quick visit.

You can even use drop in in similar situations.

Maybe you want to encourage your friends to
visit you at any time, you could say drop

in whenever you want.

Drop in whenever you want or drop by whenever
you want.

Please, I would love to see you at any time.

To end up, to end up.

We ended up just ordering pizza and not going
to the fancy restaurant.

We ended up just ordering pizza.

Maybe it’s raining.

Maybe you’re just tired.

You had plans to go to a fancy restaurant,
but that is not what happened.

Instead, you just ordered pizza.

So we’re talking about the conclusion.

What is really happening at the end?

Well, we ended up ordering pizza.

We can also use this in a little bit of a
deeper way.

Instead of saying just some actions that happen,
sometimes we use this to talk about our character.

For example, you might say he doesn’t want
to end up like his father.

This is a little strong, but maybe his father
is an alcoholic.

Maybe his father is really rude or has some
characteristics that the son doesn’t want

to have.

So we could say he doesn’t want to end up
like his father.

What is happening in his father’s life as
an adult, he doesn’t want, the son doesn’t

want the same thing to happen to him.

I don’t want to end up like my father, so
I’m going to try to surround myself with good

people and get a good education and focus
on positivity.

Okay, there’s things you can do to not end
up like someone who you don’t want to end

up like.

To figure out, to figure out.

The mechanic tried to figure out what was
wrong with my car.

He tried to figure out what was wrong with
my car.

This means he’s trying to find a solution,
find what’s happening here.

We can simply say, “Oh, I can’t figure it
out.

Can you help me please?”

This is a really common question, a very polite
question.

It means you tried.

I tried to figure it out, but I can’t figure
it out.

Can you help me please?

To fill in, to fill in.

I missed the meeting, can someone fill me
in?

Notice here that we’re talking about someone,
fill me in.

Does that mean that I need to drink a lot
of water to fill my stomach?

No.

Here, we’re talking about giving some information.

Usually, this is spoken information.

If you miss a business meeting and you want
to find out what happened, this is the perfect

phrasal verb to use.

Can someone fill me in, what happened at the
meeting?

Or maybe if you walk into your house and it’s
an absolute disaster, things are such a mess

and your kids look up and say, Hi mom,” you
might use this phrasal verb and say, “all

right, someone fill me in.

What happened in this house?”

So you want them to give you some information,
some spoken information.

Notice that this is spoken because our phrasal
verb is going to be the opposite.

To fill out, fill out.

When you go to a new doctor’s office, you
need to fill out a lot of paperwork.

Are you talking to someone?

No.

You’re giving information, but it’s written.

It’s written down.

So at the doctor’s office, the secretary might
say, “All right, can you please fill out these

forms and give them back to me when you’re
finished,” fill out these forms.

I think a good way to remember fill in and
fill out is to imagine the image of information

going into you.

So when someone fills you in, the information
is going in.

But when you fill out a form, the information
is going out of the pen.

The ink is going out of the pen.

So you need to fill out the form, but you
want someone to fill you in.

I hope that helps.

To find out, to find out.

In the next episode, we will find out who
the mysterious man is, to find out.

This just means that you’re learning something
that you didn’t know before, some kind of

information that you didn’t know before.

Or you might say, “Oh, today I found out that
phrasal verbs are really important.”

This is something new that you learned that
you didn’t know before.

I found out, this is an irregular past tense
verb.

I found out or I am finding that out now.

To get along or to get along with.

Take a look at this, I get along with my neighbors
really well.

I get along with my neighbors.

This means I have a friendly relationship
with them.

We could switch this sentence up a little
bit and take out with.

Take a look at this, my neighbors and I get
along well.

Notice how the sentence construction is different.

We have both people as the subject of the
sentence.

My husband and I get along well.

Or we could switch it up and say I get along
with my husband really well.

So if we have both people at the beginning,
you can cut out the word with.

But if you want to have one and then the other,
you can add the word with.

This is a great way to be flexible with phrasal
verbs.

To get around.

Usually we add to get around to it, to get
around to doing something.

Take a look at this.

One day, I’ll get around to cleaning the garage,
but not today.

I’ll get around to cleaning the garage but
not today.

This means you’re eventually doing something.

Usually you’re delaying it, “Oh, I’ll get
around to that later.”

This is a common phrase, I’ll get around to
that or it, I’ll get around to it later.

So if you told your husband, “All right, I’m
going to clean the garage,” and then you don’t

do it and he says, “hey, why is the garage
still a mess?”

You might say, “Oh, I’ll get around to it
later.'

I’ll delay it, I delayed it.

But eventually, I’ll just do it later.

Or when you do it, you could say I finally
got around to cleaning the garage.

Oh, this means you have been delaying it for
so long, you’ve been procrastinating.

You said eventually I’ll do it, and then you
did it.

I finally got around to cleaning the garage.

To get back at, to get back at.

Look at this, my sister took my shoes to get
back at me for taking her sweater.

If you have any siblings and you shared clothes
with them, this can work out really well sometimes,

but sometimes it doesn’t work out so well.

So what’s happening in this sentence with
to get back at?

My sister is trying to take revenge.

She’s angry that I took her sweater, so what’s
she going to do?

She’s going to take my shoes.

Maybe she’s going to wear my shoes and not
tell me about it.

She took my shoes to get back at me for taking
her sweater.

We can use this as a question too.

If you are not sure about someone’s motives,
you might say, “Are you just trying to get

back at me for taking your sweater?”

And she might say, “Yep, I am.”

Are you trying to get back at me, are you
trying to get revenge because you’re angry

about something I did?

Maybe so.

To give up.

To give up?

No, look at this sentence.

After trying to change the oil in my car for
a couple hours, I finally gave up and went

to a mechanic.

Could you guess that I’m really happy about
doing this, it was really a successful?

No, I gave up and went to a mechanic.

This means I quit.

I tried a lot, and then I quit, and I just
went to a mechanic.

We can also use this phrasal verb to give
some encouragement to someone.

So I know that in today’s lesson there is
a lot of information, a lot of phrasal verbs,

but I want to tell you, don’t give up, you
can do it.

Continue learning, say some of the sentences
out loud with me.

Repeat them, enjoy yourself, take some notes.

Maybe cook some food, have a glass of wine
at the same time that you’re studying this

lesson, don’t give up, you got this.

To grow up, to grow up.

This one is to grow up?

Actually, yes.

When I was a child, I couldn’t wait to grow
up.

Isn’t that funny?

When we’re kids, we just want to grow up.

And then when we’re adults, we look at kids
and say, “Oh, how innocent, how happy they

are.

This means that you’re getting older.”

But we can also use this as an insult to tell
someone to stop acting like a child.

So let’s imagine that you make a little body
sound, maybe you fart and somebody laughs.

And use say, “That wasn’t funny, grow up.”

Well, kids like to laugh at these types of
things, hey, adults do too.

But it’s usually considered a childish thing
to laugh at.

So you might say, “Hey, that wasn’t funny,
grow up.

Stop acting like a child, grow up.”

This is pretty harsh.

And you could say it with a laugh tone in
your voice, “Hey, grow up, that’s not funny.”

You could say it like that lightly, but it
can be pretty strong if you say this seriously.

All right.

Let’s go to our next phrasal verb, to hang
on.

Oh, can you hear hang on for just a sec while
I check this message?

That’s a great way to use this phrasal verb.

Can you hang on for just a sec?

This is just a second.

Can you imagine what this means?

To wait, to pause for just a minute.

Sometimes we even use this to pause the conversation.

If someone tells you something shocking, they
say, “Oh yeah, I was hiking and I saw rattlesnake,

and I picked it up,” and then they just keep
talking.

To pick up a rattlesnake is a very bad idea.

So you might say, “Hang on, you did what?”

You’re telling them, pause the conversation,
stop what’s happening.

Hang on, you did what.

Don’t pick up a rattlesnake.

So here it’s the same idea, you’re asking
someone, “Hey, can you hang on just a sec

while I check this message?

Hang on, pause what we’re doing while I check
this message,” or, “pause the conversation,

don’t pick up a rattlesnake.”

Vanessa’s public service announcement of the
day.

Please don’t pick up dangerous snakes unless
you are a professional.

To hang out, to hang out.

Do you want to come over to my house and hang
out?

This means we’re just casually spending time
together.

Do you want to come over and hang out?

There’s no plan, there’s no specific event.

Just maybe throwing a Frisbee in the backyard,
maybe making some tea and coffee and some

little snacks, and we’ll just hang out.

We sometimes use this phrasal verb as a way
to answer a common question.

If someone says, “What did you do this weekend?”

And either you did nothing or you don’t want
to tell them, you might say, “Oh, I just hung

out.”

This is an irregular past verb, so you might
say I just hung out, hung out.

And it means I sat around the house, I didn’t
do anything special, I just hung out.

Great, it’s a way to answer this common question.

“Hey, what did you do this weekend?”

“Man, I just hung out.

Nothing special.”

If you’d like to see some other ways to answer
this question, what do you do this weekend

or what you got going on this weekend, you
can check out this video I made up here where

you’re going to have the opportunity to learn
some common questions, answer those questions,

and also practice speaking with me.

I hope that you’ll enjoy that lesson, make
sure you check it out.

To hold on, to hold on.

I’m holding on to hope that someday we’ll
be able to travel again soon.

Oh, wouldn’t that be great?

We can get the idea I’m holding on to hope.

I’m not holding on to my phone.

No, it’s something more figurative, I’m holding
onto hope.

It’s a great way to use this phrasal verb,
which means you cling to stuff.

But sometimes we use this in a more figurative
way.

Remember how I just talked about, hang on,
you did what, you picked up a rattlesnake?

Hang on.

Well, we could also say hold on, you did what?

Hold on, you did what?

So we’re clinging to this moment in the conversation.

Wait, you picked up a rattlesnake?

No, don’t talk about other things, I want
to talk about this thing that you just said,

it’s shocking.

Hold on, you did what?

Also, if you would like to incorporate phrasal
verbs into your life in a fun way with songs,

take a look at this fun sentence.

Hold on, I’m coming (singing).

This is a classic Sam & David song, I recommend
searching for it on YouTube.

Some of the words are a little tough to understand
in the way that he’s singing it, but you can

check out the lyrics at the same time that
you’re listening.

But he uses this phrasal verb hold on.

And he’s saying, “Wait, don’t go away, stay
here.

I want to cling to this relationship, and
I will help you.

I’m coming, I’m coming help you.

Hold on.”

It’s fun when you can recognize phrasal verbs
in songs, in movies and TV shows.

And when you hear them and you understand
them, it brings such joy and excitement because

you’re studying, your hard work is worth it.

To keep on.

If you keep on practicing, you’ll get better.

That’s true.

If you keep on practicing the piano, eventually
you’ll get better.

Maybe it will take a long time, maybe it will
take a week, but you’ll get better.

What’s this mean?

If you continue practicing, you’ll get better.

I feel like this phrasal verb to keep on is
used a lot more than to continue.

To continue is very descriptive.

But in daily conversation, we use keep on
a lot more.

I have to keep on working, I have a lot to
do.

Keep on doing something.

There’s a fixed phrase that we sometimes use
to encourage other people using this phrasal

verb twice, keep on keeping on.

What do you think this means?

If someone told you, “I know you’re learning
lots of phrasal verbs.

It’s a lot, but keep on keeping on.”

This means continue continuing.

You’re doing a hard job, this is a lot.

But do you know what, Keep on doing it, you
got this.

Keep on keeping on.

To look forward to.

I’m looking forward to visiting my family
over the summer, I’m looking forward to it.

This means there’s something in the future
that I’m excited about or maybe something

I’m not excited about.

No one looks forward to tax time maybe unless
you’re a tax accountant and that’s what makes

you excited.

But we can say most people don’t look forward
to tax time.

It’s not an exciting thing that you’re waiting
for.

No, I don’t look forward to tax time, but
I look forward to seeing my family.

To look out.

When you hike, look out for snakes.

I don’t know why I’m thinking about snakes
a lot right now, maybe because it’s getting

warmer and they’re coming out a lot more,
especially where I live.

So you have to look out for snakes.

This means you need to be careful, watch out
for snakes.

Watch out is actually another phrasal verb
we’ll talk about later.

But let’s start with look out, look out for
snakes.

There’s another great idiom that has a similar
meaning, it’s kind of a bonus idiom, it’s

not a phrasal verb.

But we might say you need to keep an eye out
for snakes.

Don’t take your eye out and look for snakes.

No, no, no.

But we use the singularly.

I mean, it’s a good idea to use both your
eyes to look out for snakes.

But for some reason, this idiom just uses
eye, you should keep an eye out for snakes.

Keep an eye out for snakes, you never know
when you might see one.

You don’t want to accidentally step on one,
keep an eye out for snakes, look out for snakes.

To look up.

To look up?

Not exactly this meaning.

You might say, “I didn’t know the meaning
of the word to hold on, so I looked it up

in the dictionary.”

This is when you search for something usually
online or in a book or in a dictionary to

get some more information.

I looked it up in the dictionary.

You might even just say I looked it up.

If someone says, “Oh, how do you know so much
about river otters?”

You might say, “Oh, I looked it up,” or, “I
looked up some information about them last

week.

So that’s how I know a lot about river otters,
I looked it up.”

To pull over.

It was raining so hard that I had to pull
over and wait for the rain to stop.

I had to pull over.

You get the sense here that it’s not safe
to drive.

I didn’t continue driving, I pulled over.

This means you steer your car to the side
of the road or maybe to a gas station or somewhere

safe and wait.

You might just stop completely or you’re just
waiting for a period of time.

We often use this phrasal verb for police.

So you could say, “Yeah, I was driving too
fast.

And when I saw police lights behind me, I
pulled over.”

But we can use this in more specific ways
to talk about this situation.

You might say he, the police officer, he pulled
me over, he pulled me over.

Or if we want to use this indirectly, this
is a really common phrase, you might just

say, “I got pulled over on my way to the party,
I got pulled over.”

This means someone is doing the action to
me.

I wouldn’t have stopped if the police weren’t
behind me, I would’ve just kept driving.

So who did this?

Well, I didn’t directly say in my sentence,
but this phrase always means the police.

I got pulled over.

There were some lights, a siren.

Man, I’m getting pulled over, I got pulled
over.

I hope that doesn’t happen to you anytime
soon.

To put off, to put off.

Look at this.

I put off learning phrasal verbs for too long,
it’s time to start today.

I put off, this means you are postponing something,
you are delaying something.

I can’t put it off for any longer, I need
to start today.

When I saw Vanessa had this lesson about 50
phrasal verbs, I knew it was time to stop

putting off learning phrasal verbs.

Today was my chance, bring it on.

To put up with.

To put up with?

No, we’re not raising something up.

You might say, “Oh, my sweet husband puts
up with my terrible singing, he puts up with

my terrible singing.”

Do you want to listen to terrible singing?

Probably not.

But if someone puts up with your terrible
singing, they tolerate it.

Yeah, he puts up with my terrible singing
because he knows that it makes me happy to

sing.

So we can use put up with for tolerating something,
“Yup, he puts up with my singing.”

Or we can use it for someone, but this is
a little harsher.

What if you said, “I don’t know how he puts
up with her?”

Well, let’s say that two people are dating
and the girl in this situation is a little

bit difficult.

Well, you might be talking or gossiping about
their relationship, you might say, “I don’t

know how he puts up with her, I don’t know
how he tolerates her.”

Do you see here how this is not one part of
her singing?

No, this is just her in general, her character,
her personality.

This is a little bit harsher to say I cannot
tolerate that person.

That’s much stronger than saying I can’t tolerate
this one thing that that person does.

It’s okay to say, “I can’t put up with your
singing right now.

Please stop, I’m trying to study.”

It’s different than saying, “I can’t put up
with you.”

This is a little strong.

So make sure if you use this, you use it in
very strong situations.

To run away.

My dog is too lazy to run away.

He knows where the food is, so he’s going
to stay here.

He’s too lazy to run away.

Or did you ever try to run away from home
as a kid?

This is a common phrase to run away from home,
and it means to escape.

My dog knows that the food is here, so he’s
not going to run away.

He’s not going to escape because it’s not
better out there, it’s better here where there’s

food.

And the same as a kid, well, you might run
away from home.

This fixed phrase, yeah, she tried to run
away from home last week, but she only made

it to the neighbor’s house.

To run away, to escape.

To run into.

Well, not exactly a physical running into
someone, but it’s a similar idea.

Look at this sentence, I don’t want to run
into a bear while I’m hiking.

Yes, of course you don’t want to physically
hit a bear while you’re hiking.

But a more likely situation is to unexpectedly
see a bear, I don’t want to run into a bear.

Or you might say, “I ran into my high school
English teacher last week at the grocery store.”

I didn’t plan to meet her there, it was just
unexpected.

I unexpectedly saw my teacher, my old high
school teacher at the grocery store, I ran

into my teacher.

Or we could use this as kind of a question,
you’ll never guess who I ran into today.

This is a fun little question to ask someone,
and then they guess really random people.

You’ll never guess who I ran into today.

Good question.

To run out of or to run out.

We ran out of milk and eggs yesterday, so
I need to go to the store, we ran out of.

Am I carrying milk and eggs and running out
of the house?

No.

This just means that there’s none left, it’s
all finished.

We ran out of milk and eggs, so it’s time
to go to the store.

But we can also just use to run out.

Take a look at this.

There’s no more milk, sorry, we ran out yesterday.

Why did I not say we ran out of milk?

Well, we already know the context, we know
that we’re talking about milk.

So you could just say, “Yeah, sorry, we ran
out yesterday, and I haven’t bought any new

milk yet.”

We ran out.

To stick with, to stick with.

I tried guitar, piano, violin.

And finally, I decided to stick with the drums.

What do you think that means?

That means you are continuing to do something.

To continue playing the drums.

I stopped playing guitar, stopped playing
piano, stopped playing violin and continued

playing the drums.

I think I’m going to stick with the drums.

Or we could use this for friends.

We could say good friends stick with each
other even through hard times.

They continue their friendship even through
hard times.

To think over, to think over.

It’s a good idea to think over big purchases
before you buy them.

Before you buy a car, you should think it
over.

This is a great phrase to maybe give someone
advice.

Think it over, this means you need to consider
it seriously.

Think it over before you make the decision.

You need to think over a big purchase before
you buy it.

To turn down.

No, this is not really talking about physically
turning something down.

Take a look at this sentence.

I was so full from dinner that I had to turn
down dessert.

I love dessert, but I was so full that I had
to turn down dessert.

This means you’re refusing something.

You might even use this politely and say,
“I’m sorry, I need to turn it down.

I’m so full.

I need to refuse dessert because I’m just
so full.”

We can use this for people too.

Like I mentioned before with some of the other
phrasal verbs, it’s a little more serious.

If you are proposing to your girlfriend, you
are asking her to marry you, and she says

no.

Well you might say, “She turned me down.”

This means she refused me.

And it’s kind of deeper about your character
or who you are, it’s very serious.

She turned me down, I can’t believe it.

To turn off.

It’s a good habit to turn off your phone an
hour or more before bed.

To turn off.

This means you’re stopping your phone, but
we can imagine you’re stopping the flow of

something because we can use this more figuratively
too.

We might say that some people have trouble
turning off their brain before bed.

You lay in bed and you just keep thinking
about so many things.

You need to turn off your brain in order to
relax and sleep.

You don’t want to have your brain turned off
all the time.

But before bed, it’s important to turn off
your brain.

You’re stopping the flow of thoughts, the
flow of energy.

Just like you need to turn off your phone,
you need to turn off your brain a little bit

too.

To turn up, to turn up.

I surprised my family when I turned up to
the party unannounced.

Can you guess what this means?

I appeared unexpectedly.

They didn’t think that I was coming, and then
I knocked on the door, and there I was.

I turned up unexpectedly.

Or you could say my cat was gone for two days
and then he just turned up out of nowhere.

I have no idea where he was, he didn’t tell
me.

He just turned up, he appeared unexpectedly
out of nowhere.

To warm up to.

Talking about cats, it took my cat a while
to warm up to me.

It took my cat a while to warm up to me.

If you know anything about the difference
between cats and dogs.

Well, dogs always want to.

But cats, sometimes they need more time.

And that’s this idea of to warm up to, to
start to like someone.

It takes time.

We can imagine a curling iron that sometimes
people use to curl their hair.

It doesn’t heat up immediately, it takes time.

And that’s the idea here of someone or something,
my cat took time to warm up to me.

Immediately, he didn’t sit on my lap and love
me.

No, he had to make sure that I was okay first.

We can warm up to someone or something, but
we could also warm up to something more figuratively

like an idea.

We might say, “I didn’t want to get a trampoline.

But after some time, I started to warm up
to the idea.

I thought about it, realized, yeah, it could
be pretty fun, and now we have a trampoline.”

I started to warm up to the idea.

Watch out.

Oh, watch out for falling rocks.

Or watch out, sometimes bees make a nest in
the ground around there, don’t step without

looking.

Watch out.

This is used to caution someone, to be aware.

Watch out when you hike, sometimes bears will
walk by unexpectedly.

Watch out.

To wear off.

The energy from my morning tea starts to wear
off around noon.

That’s soon.

The energy from my tea from my tea starts
to wear off.

Can you guess what this means?

It’s fading away.

When I first drank my tea, I had lots of energy
and then it’s starting to fade away, it’s

wearing off.

We could also use this for something that
you write with.

For example, you might say the marker is starting
to wear off.

A couple of weeks ago, my son was really excited
because he learned to write his name.

And he took a marker.

And during his nap time, he wrote his name
all over his sheets.

You can see this here.

He kept writing his name everywhere.

And it’s pretty funny, the marker is washable,
it’s not a big deal.

He was really excited.

And now the marker is starting to wear off,
so it’s fading away.

But I’m sure he will write it more and more
because he is so excited about his new skill.

Phrasal verb number 50, you’re finally here,
congratulations, is to work something out.

Take a look at this.

My husband likes the mountains, I like the
beach.

So for our next vacation, we’re going to need
to work something out.

I could have said, “We’re going to need to
work out a mutually beneficial solution for

our vacation.”

A little too much.

It’s a much more natural to say, “We need
to work something out.”

This means we need to find a compromise.

Sometimes parents save this to their children
if their children are fighting and they say,

“Mom, help me.

No, she did this.

No, he did this,” and the parent doesn’t want
to get involved.

Your parent might say, “Well, you guys need
to work something out yourselves.

This is something that I’m not going to get
involved in, both of you need to come up with

some kind of compromise.”

You need to work something out yourselves.

So how did you do?

Are you starting to warm up to some of these
phrasal verbs?

If you stick with practicing them, they’ll
get better and easier with time.

Now, I want you to think over the phrases
that you just learned and tell me in the comments

what are you looking forward to doing this
weekend?

I can’t wait to read what you have to say
and to see what you’ve come up with.

Well, thank you so much for learning English
with me, and I’ll see you again next Friday

for a new lesson here on my YouTube channel.

Bye.

The next step is to download my free ebook,
Five Steps to Becoming a Confident English

Speaker.

You’ll learn what you need to do to speak
confidently and fluently.

Don’t forget to subscribe to my YouTube channel
for more free lessons.

Thanks so much.

Bye.

Vanessa:
嗨,我是来自 SpeakEnglishWithVanessa.com 的 Vanessa。

你准备好掌握前 50 个短语
动词了吗?

是的,让我们这样做。

你有没有听过英语
对话,但你就是不

知道他们在说什么?

你知道个别的词,但意义
就是不加起来。

如果你一直在推迟学习短语
动词,你可能想看看今天的课程。

它会带你从 huh 马上带上
它。

那么什么是短语动词呢?

嗯,短语动词是这样的两部分或三部分
动词。

有一个普通动词 try 加上第二部分。

第二部分可以称为分词,
可以称为介词,这

并不重要。

第二部分是什么使它成为一个短语
动词。

尝试不同于尝试或
尝试。

这些有不同的含义。

因此,当我们使用短语动词时,它会改变
原始动词的含义。

短语动词在日常对话中非常常见
,所以我希望

这节课中的前 50 个短语动词能帮助你
在口语中获得一些信心,同时

也能帮助你理解其他人
在说什么。

因为了解这些短语动词的细微差别
和不同含义很重要

让我们从第一个开始。

第一个是加起来,加起来。

看看这句话,她的故事没有
加起来,我认为她在撒谎。

你认为这个短语动词是什么意思?

我不是直接告诉你
短语动词的意思,而是希望你

根据句子来猜测。

这就是我们将为所有
50 个短语动词做的事情。

这有点像一个 50 个问题的测试,希望
是一个有趣的测试。

你认为加起来是什么意思,她的故事
没有加起来,我认为她在撒谎。

这意味着它没有意义。

关于它的某些东西似乎不合逻辑或奇怪,
它没有加起来。

我们通常在否定句中使用这个短语动词
,所以这就是这里发生的事情。

她的故事没有加起来。

如果你是学生,你去找
老师说:“对不起,我没有完成作业,

因为昨晚我出了
车祸,我不得不去医院看望我的

祖母。

然后我有了我的狗,我的狗正在吃
我的作业。”

这个故事似乎有点不可思议,
所以老师可能会想,“哦,你的故事

没有加起来,我认为你在撒谎。

你只是没有做功课。”

所以在这里,这个故事没有意义,
不合逻辑,不合逻辑。

让我们去第二个,支持某人。

看看这句话,
当我决定申请研究生时,我的父母支持了我

我的父母支持我,你认为
这意味着什么?

我的背,支撑着我。

我们可以想象你的背部是你身体的一部分
,它为你提供支撑。

没有你的背部,你不能坐起来或站起来或做很多事情

因此,当您支持某人时,您会给予他们
支持。

当我决定申请研究生院时,我的父母支持我

这是一个很好的例子,说明短语动词
如何直接替换另一个可能更教科书的

单词。

说我父母支持我并没有错,

但当我决定申请研究生时,我父母支持我更好

短语动词只会让你听起来更
舒服,就像你知道你在

说什么。

让我们看一个类似的表达式,
这是我想添加的一种奖励提示

如果我对你说我得到你的支持,
我得到你的支持。

你能猜到这是什么意思吗?

这不是一个短语动词,
它只是一个类似于这个短语

动词的附加短语。

这意味着我会支持你,我一直支持你,我支持
你。

当我们想给某人鼓励时,我们经常使用它

所以如果你的朋友可能会做一些
有点冒险的事情,你可以说,“无论如何我都会支持

你,我支持你。”

伟大的,美妙的短语使用。

让我们继续我们的下一个短语动词,
炸毁。

看看这句话。

当我告诉她我不能参加她的聚会时,
她大发雷霆。

这是过去式,这是一个不规则的
过去式动词。

她炸了,你觉得她真的幸福吗?

不。

相反,这是要突然生气,
她炸了。

所以如果这是你性格中
容易爆发的一部分,也许

你可以做一些深呼吸,让你的头脑清醒一点。

如果你很容易生气,好吧,也许你很容易
爆发。

我需要冷静一点。

好的。

让我们进行下一个,带来一些东西
,带来一些东西。

50 个新的短语动词。

是的。

来吧。

看我的表情,你能看出这
不像之前的,我没有

炸毁,我没有生气吗?

相反,我
对充满信心地接受某种挑战感到兴奋。

是的,50 个新的短语动词,我能做到,带上
它。

我们经常以此来鼓励
自己。

如果你面临某种挑战,
并且想真正鼓励自己,

你可以说:“好吧。

加油,我能做到。”

要提出来,
除非您准备好进行长时间的讨论,否则您不应该在这所房子里提出政治

问题。

你不应该提到政治,这意味着
你不应该在谈话中提及政治,

除非你想进行长时间的讨论,因为
这里的人们对政治非常热情。

提起一些事情,
你不应该在你的国家提起什么? 在您的国家/地区

您应该避免的话题是什么

如果您想查看一些您应该避免
的英语常见禁忌问题,尤其是在

美国,请查看
我在这里制作的这个视频。

它将帮助您了解不应该提出哪些主题
,除非您想进行长时间的讨论。

取消。

这对夫妇没有取消婚礼,而是
决定私奔。

可能是去年,如果你想
在你的国家结婚,可能会有点

困难,因为你不能举行盛大的婚礼。

对于很多想
在去年结婚并可能

在今年继续结婚的人来说非常不幸。

那你还有什么选择?

好吧,你可以取消婚礼,也
可以私奔。

你认为这个短语动词是什么意思
,取消婚礼?

就是取消婚礼的意思。

我们要取消婚礼。

好吧,也许你还想结婚,
所以你可以私奔。

如果你看过我之前关于
10 个英语笑话的视频,我们谈到了

私奔这个词。

这意味着和你的爱人私奔,
也许在某个法院或

一个不错的地方结婚,但只有
你们两个,你们在私奔。

所以你可以取消你的婚礼,你可以
取消婚礼,或者你可以私奔。

冷静下来。

当我有压力的一天时,我喜欢在
外面散步很长时间来冷静下来。

也许你也有同样的感觉。

当您在户外散步时,它可以帮助
您冷静下来。

这个短语动词的意思是放松,冷静
下来。

赶上,赶上。

我和我的朋友共进午餐,因为
我们很久没见面了。

我在追我的朋友并抓住
她吗?

不,看看另一个问题。

想见面喝杯咖啡并赶上吗?

想见面喝杯咖啡并赶上吗?

我们不跑步,我不邀请你
参加比赛。

相反,这意味着您正在与
一段时间未见的人会面。

您想了解他们最近生活中发生的事情

你想赶上。

有时我们会说赶上
你生活中正在发生的事情。

是的,我想了解正在发生的事情,
所以告诉我一切。

赶上。

入住。

看这句话
,我老公把车停好,我就去酒店check in了。

办理入住手续,我在酒店做什么?

检查,检查,检查。

不,这只是意味着您
在酒店注册。

你告诉他们,“嘿,我在这里,”
他们在电脑上写道,“好吧,Vanessa

在这里,这是你的钥匙。”

这个过程称为签入

。签出。

结帐可能具有相反的含义。

当您离开酒店时,您会退房。

你把钥匙还给他们,然后说:“我
完了,我要走了。

非常感谢。”

但是我想给你另一个意思
,如果你看到这句话,我很兴奋

去看看我所在城市的新公园。

去看看新公园。

或者如果我只是说检查一下。

哦,你认为这意味着什么?

这意味着看到某事或尝试某事。

我迫不及待地想看看我所在城市的新公园,我迫不及待地想看看我所在城市
的新公园

到处走走,看看发生了什么。

太好了,你正在检查它。

我们有时会单独使用这个短语,
检查一下。

这只是意味着看看这个。

看看,我不敢相信我儿子
一个人完成了100块拼图。

看看这个,看看这个。

这是一种惊讶和惊讶的表达

哇,看看吧。

凑钱。

我不能去参加聚会,但我还是
想凑钱买礼物。

我想帮助参与一些事情。

可能与金钱有关,也可能与您的精力
和时间有关。

看看这个,我儿子喜欢
插手帮我打理花园。

他花时间和精力挖掘和
除草,并帮助我打理花园。

他没有给我钱,他没有
通过给钱来参与。

相反,这是他的时间。

所以,如果你不能去参加派对,但
又想帮忙买一份特别的礼物,你可以

给你的朋友一些钱,然后说:“给
点钱,因为我想凑钱买

礼物。”

他们将用这笔钱来帮助
支付目前的费用。

这是一个很棒的短语动词。

关闭,关闭。

这与关闭不同。

看看这个。

由于施工,他们关闭
了高速公路的两条车道。

他们关闭了高速公路的两条车道。

或者在大流行期间,很多餐馆都
关门了。

你能理解这个短语动词的意思吗?

这意味着它们完全关闭,有时甚至
永远关闭。

因此,在高速公路上,他们完全关闭了两条
车道,因为他们正在施工,

或者因为大流行而永久关闭的企业

这是一个非常不幸的情况。

带着东西下来。

我感觉不太好,我想我遇到
了一些事情。

你能猜到这意味着开始
感到恶心,开始感到不舒服。

我们将其用于不严重的疾病。

例如,也许你感冒了,也许
你喉咙痛。

也许你甚至得了流感,但
不是那么严重。

你可以以此为借口,“对不起,我
不能参加你的聚会,我想我

有事要下来。”

我们经常在这个短语动词上使用一些东西,
因为在疾病开始时,你

可能不知道它是什么。

但你可以说,“对不起,我想我
感冒了。”

如果你知道,你可以具体说,“我想
我得了流感,我应该

远离人群几天

。得了某种疾病。

而与此相反,下来 with,
to come up with.

to come up something,看看
这句话。

我需要为
我妈妈的生日

准备一个很棒的礼物。拿出一个很棒的礼物。

我会收到一个很棒的礼物吗?

不 . 再

看看这句话,我
想不出什么特别的东西,所以我只是烤

了一个蛋糕。

这意味着你正在寻找一个想法

。提出一个礼物意味着我
需要考虑一个伟大的 生日

礼物的想法,我想不出一个好主意。

或者你可能需要写一篇论文,
你需要想出一个原创的想法。

你需要为你的论文找到一个原创的想法
, 想出点什么来

. 减少, 减少.

看看这句话.

我正在尝试减少油炸食品, 但是
它很好吃.

我正在尝试减少 关于油炸食品。

你觉得我想多吃点吗?

不。

相反,这意味着你试图做更少
的事情。

你正试图从你的生活中得到一些东西
,以减少你对油炸食品的消费

或者你可以自己说。

如果有人说:“你为什么不吃
冰淇淋?”

你可以说,“我正在努力削减开支。”

你不需要使用,因为你
不需要重复我试图减少

冰淇淋,因为他们只是说冰淇淋。

所以我们知道这里的一般主题和背景。

你可以再说一遍冰淇淋,我
想减少冰淇淋,但你可以

自己说,我想减少。

这是很自然的事情。

切断,切断。

剪掉我的头发?

不,这不是我们要讨论的。

看看这个。

红色车里的司机拦住了我,差点
撞到车上。

打断我。

这是一种令人愤怒的情况,你正在
开车,另一辆车进来了

。然后你走了,你猛踩刹车,或者你
必须转向一边以确保安全。

他已经做到了,所以它有点突然结束
或快速停止。

通常,我们在开车时使用它,那个司机会
打断我或说话。

你可以说他试图告诉老师
他的借口,但她在句子中打断了他。

也许她认为他的故事没有加起来。

所以当他说话的时候,砰,她打断了他。

Ed,不,不,不,我不认为这是一个借口。

不,你需要有你的功课。

她打断了他,这个突然结束
他的想法的想法。

顺路或顺路。

看看这个。

嘿,你在家吗?

我在附近,我想顺便去
看看。

如果你打电话给你的朋友并告诉你的朋友
这件事,我就在附近,想顺便去

看看。

这是否意味着你想把东西丢
在地上,或者你想

给你的朋友一些东西?

不,这只是意味着我想见你。

你有点自发地去拜访,顺便
去看看。

通常这是一次快速访问。

不一定需要,但
通常是这种快速访问。

您甚至可以在类似情况下使用 drop in。

也许你想鼓励你的朋友随时来
拜访你,你可以说随时来

想来就来,或
想来就来。

拜托,我很想随时见到你。

结束,结束。

我们最终只是点了披萨,而不是
去高档餐厅。

我们最终只点了披萨。

也许正在下雨。

也许你只是累了。

你曾计划去一家高档餐厅,
但事实并非如此。

相反,您只是点了披萨。

所以我们在谈论结论。

最后到底发生了什么?

好吧,我们最终点了披萨。

我们还可以
更深入地使用它。 有时我们

不是只说发生的一些行为,
而是用它来谈论我们的性格。

例如,你可能会说他不
想像他父亲那样结束。

这有点强,但也许他的父亲
是个酒鬼。

可能是他父亲真的很粗鲁,或者有
一些儿子

不想拥有的特质。

所以我们可以说他不
想像他父亲那样结束。

父亲成年后的生活中发生的事情
,他不希望,儿子也不

希望同样的事情发生在他身上。

我不想像我父亲那样结束,所以
我要努力让自己身边有

好人,接受良好的教育,专注
于积极向上。

好吧,有些事情你可以做,不要
像一个你不想最终喜欢的人那样结束

想办法,想办法。

机械师试图弄清楚
我的车出了什么问题。

他试图弄清楚我的车出了什么问题

这意味着他正在努力寻找解决方案,
找出这里发生的事情。

我们可以简单地说,“哦,我
想不通。

你能帮帮我吗?”

这是一个非常常见的问题,一个非常礼貌的
问题。

说明你试过了。

我试图弄清楚,但我无法
弄清楚。

你能帮我吗?

填写,填写。

我错过了会议,有人可以填写
吗?

注意这里我们在谈论某人,
填上我。这

是否意味着我需要喝
很多水来填饱肚子?

不,

在这里,我们谈论的是提供一些信息。

通常,这是口头信息。

如果您错过了一次商务会议并且
想了解发生了什么,这是一个完美的

短语动词。

谁能给我补充一下,
会议上发生了什么?

或者,如果你走进你的房子,这
绝对是一场灾难,事情变得如此混乱

,你的孩子抬起头说,嗨,妈妈,”你
可以使用这个短语动词说,“

好吧,有人填我。

什么 发生在这所房子里?”

所以你想让他们给你一些信息,
一些口语信息。

注意这是口语,因为我们的
动词短语是相反的。

要填写,填写。

当你去看新医生时 办公室,你
需要填写很多文件。

你在和某人说话吗?

不。

你在提供信息,但它是写的。

它写下来了。

所以在医生办公室,秘书可能会
说,“好吧,可以 请填写这些

表格并在完成后将它们还给我
,”填写这些表格。

我认为记住填写和填写的一个好方法
是想象信息

进入您的图像。

所以当有人 填写你,信息
正在输入。

但是当你填写表格时,
信息会从笔中流出

。墨水 即将离开笔。

因此,您需要填写表格,但您
希望有人帮您填写。

我希望这会有所帮助。

去发现,去发现。

在下一集中,我们将找出
神秘人是谁,一探究竟。

这只是意味着你正在学习
一些你以前不知道的东西,一些你以前不知道的

信息。

或者你可能会说,“哦,今天我发现
短语动词真的很重要。”

这是
您以前不知道的新知识。

我发现,这是一个不规则的过去式
动词。

我发现了,或者我现在发现了。

相处或相处。

看看这个,我和邻居相处
得很好。

我和邻居们相处得很好。

这意味着我与他们有友好的关系

我们可以把这句话调高
一点,然后拿出来。

看看这个,我和邻居相处得
很好。

注意句子结构是如何不同的。

我们有两个人作为
句子的主语。

我丈夫和我相处得很好。

或者我们可以换个角度说我
和我丈夫相处得很好。

所以如果我们一开始就有两个人,
你可以删掉with这个词。

但是如果你想要一个然后另一个,
你可以添加这个词。

这是灵活使用短语动词的好方法

到处走走。

通常我们添加以解决它,以
解决做某事。

看看这个。

有一天,我会抽空打扫车库,
但不是今天。

我会去打扫车库,但
不是今天。

这意味着你最终会做某事。

通常你会延迟它,“哦,我稍后会
解决这个问题。”

这是一个常见的短语,我会解决
那个或它,我稍后会解决它。

所以如果你告诉你丈夫,“好吧,我
要去打扫车库”,然后你不

这样做,他说,“嘿,为什么车库
还是一团糟?”

你可能会说,“哦,我
稍后再谈。”

我会推迟,我推迟了。

但最终,我会稍后再做。

或者当你这样做时,你可以说我终于
有时间打扫车库了。

哦,这意味着你一直在
拖延 好久了,你一直在拖延。

你说最终我会做,然后你
做到了。

我终于有时间打扫车库了

。回来,回来。

看这个,我姐姐拿了我的 鞋子来
报复我拿了她的毛衣。

如果你有兄弟姐妹,你
和他们分享衣服,这有时会很好,

但有时效果不太好。

所以这句话中发生了什么
回来?

我姐姐要报仇。

她很生气我拿走了她的毛衣,那
她要怎么办?

她会拿走我的鞋子。

也许她会穿我的鞋子而不
告诉我。

她拿走了 我的鞋子来报复我拿了
她的毛衣。

我们也可以用这个作为一个问题。

如果你不确定某人的动机,
你可能会说,“你只是 想

报复我拿了你的毛衣?

”她可能会说,“是的,我是。”

你是想报复我吗,
你是想报复我,因为你对

我的所作所为感到愤怒吗?

也许是这样。

放弃。

放弃?

不,看这句话。

在尝试为我的车换油
几个小时后,我终于放弃并

去找了机械师。

你能猜到我真的很高兴
这样做,真的很成功吗?

不,我放弃了,去找机械师。

这意味着我放弃了。

我尝试了很多,然后我退出了,我只是
去了一个机械师。

我们也可以用这个短语动词
给某人一些鼓励。

所以我知道今天的课
有很多信息,很多动词短语,

但是我想告诉你,不要放弃,你
可以做到的。

继续学习,
和我一起大声说出一些句子。

重复它们,享受自己,做一些笔记。

也许
在你学习本课的同时煮点食物,喝杯酒

,不要放弃,你明白了。

长大,长大。

这是要长大的吗?

其实,是。

当我还是个孩子的时候,我迫不及待地长大
了。

这不是很好笑吗?

当我们还是孩子的时候,我们只想长大。

然后当我们成年后,我们看着
孩子说,“哦,他们多么天真,多么

快乐。

这意味着你正在变老。”

但我们也可以以此为侮辱,告诉
某人不要再像孩子一样行事了。

所以让我们想象一下,你发出一点身体
声音,也许你放了屁,有人笑了。

并使用说,“这不好笑,长大了。”

好吧,孩子们喜欢嘲笑这些类型的
事情,嘿,成年人也喜欢。

但这通常被认为是一件
幼稚的事情。

所以你可能会说,“嘿,这不好笑,
长大点。

别再像个孩子了,长大点。”

这是相当苛刻的。

你可以用
笑声说,“嘿,长大了,这不好笑。”

你可以这样轻描淡写,但
如果你认真地说,它可能会非常强烈。

好的。

让我们转到下一个短语动词,
坚持。

哦,当我查看这条消息时,你能听到稍等片刻
吗?

这是使用这个短语动词的好方法。

你能坚持一秒钟吗?

这只是一秒钟。

你能想象这意味着什么吗?

等待,暂停一分钟。

有时我们甚至用它来暂停对话。

如果有人告诉你一些令人震惊的事情,他们会
说,“哦,是的,我在远足,我看到响尾蛇

,我把它捡起来了,”然后他们就继续
说话。

拿起响尾蛇是一个非常糟糕的主意。

所以你可能会说,“等等,你做了什么?”

你告诉他们,暂停谈话,
停止正在发生的事情。

等等,你做了什么。

不要捡起响尾蛇。

所以这里的想法是一样的,你问
某人,“嘿,你能等

我检查这条消息吗?

等一下,在我检查这条消息的时候暂停我们正在做的事情
,”或者,“暂停 谈话,

不要拿起响尾蛇。”

瓦内萨当天的公共服务公告

除非您是专业人士,否则请不要捡起危险的蛇

闲逛,闲逛。

你想来我家玩
吗?

这意味着我们只是随便花时间
在一起。

你想过来闲逛吗?

没有计划,没有具体的事件。

只是也许在后院扔一个飞盘,
也许煮些茶和咖啡和一些

小点心,然后我们就出去玩。

我们有时使用这个短语动词作为
回答常见问题的一种方式。

如果有人说:“你这个周末做了什么?”

要么你什么都没做,要么你
不想告诉他们,你可能会说,“哦,我只是

出去玩了。”

这是一个不规则的过去动词,所以你可能会
说我只是闲逛,闲逛。

这意味着我坐在房子周围,我没有
做任何特别的事情,我只是闲逛。

太好了,这是回答这个常见问题的一种方式。

“喂,你这个周末干什么了?”

“伙计,我只是出去玩了。

没什么特别的。”

如果你想通过其他方式来回答
这个问题,这个周末

你做什么或者这个周末你有什么事情,你
可以看看我在这里制作的这个视频,

你将有机会 学习
一些常见问题,回答这些问题,

并练习与我交谈。

我希望你会喜欢这节课,
一定要看看。

坚持,坚持。

我坚持希望有一天我们
能够很快再次旅行。

哦,那不是很好吗?

我们可以理解我坚持希望的想法。

我没有拿着手机。

不,这是更形象化的东西,我
抱着希望。

这是使用这个短语动词的好方法,
这意味着你坚持东西。

但有时我们以更形象的方式使用它

还记得我刚才说的,等一下,
你做了什么,你捡到了一条响尾蛇?

不挂断。

好吧,我们也可以说等一下,你做了什么?

等等,你做了什么?

所以我们在谈话中紧紧抓住这一刻。

等等,你捡到了响尾蛇?

不,不说别的了,我
要说的是你刚才说的这件事,

很震撼。

等等,你做了什么?

此外,如果您想
通过歌曲以有趣的方式将短语动词融入您的生活,

请查看这个有趣的句子。

等一下,我来了(唱)。

这是一首经典的 Sam & David 歌曲,我
建议在 YouTube 上搜索。

有些词
在他唱的方式上有点难以理解,但你可以

在听的同时查看歌词

但他使用了这个短语动词hold on。

他说,“等等,不要走开,
留在这里。

我想坚持这段关系,
我会帮助你。

我来了,我来帮助你。

坚持住。”

当您可以识别
歌曲、电影和电视节目中的短语动词时,这很有趣。

当你听到它们并理解
它们时,它会带来如此快乐和兴奋,因为

你正在学习,你的努力是值得的。

坚持。

如果你继续练习,你会变得更好。

这是真的。

如果你继续练习钢琴,最终
你会变得更好。

也许需要很长时间,也许
需要一周,但你会好起来的。

这是什么意思?

如果你继续练习,你会变得更好。

我觉得这个短语动词 to keep on
比 continue 使用得更多。

继续是非常具有描述性的。

但是在日常对话中,我们更多地使用了keep
on。

我必须继续工作,我有很多
事情要做。

继续做某事。

我们有时会使用一个固定短语
来鼓励其他人使用这个短语

动词两次,继续保持。

你认为这是什么意思?

如果有人告诉你,“我知道你正在学习
很多短语动词

。很多,但请继续坚持。”

这意味着继续继续。

你做的很辛苦,这很多。

但是你知道吗,继续做下去,你
得到了这个。

继续坚持下去。

值得期待。

我期待着在夏天拜访我的家人
,我很期待。

这意味着未来会有一些
让我兴奋的事情,或者可能是

我不兴奋的事情。

除非你是一名税务会计师,否则没有人会期待报税时间
,这就是让

你兴奋的原因。

但我们可以说,大多数人并不
期待报税时间。

这不是您正在等待的令人兴奋的事情

不,我不期待报税时间,但
我期待见到我的家人。

向外看。

徒步旅行时,请注意蛇。

我不知道为什么我现在经常想起蛇
,也许是因为

天气越来越暖和,它们出来的次数更多,
尤其是我住的地方。

所以你必须小心蛇。

这意味着你需要小心,
小心蛇。

注意实际上是
我们稍后将讨论的另一个短语动词。

但让我们从小心开始,小心
蛇。

还有另一个具有相似
含义的成语,它是一种奖励成语,它

不是短语动词。

但我们可能会说你需要
留意蛇。

不要把你的眼睛拿出来寻找蛇。

不不不。

但是我们使用单数。

我的意思是,用你的双眼来寻找蛇是个好主意

但不知何故,这个成语只用
了眼睛,你要小心蛇。

留意蛇,你永远不知道什么
时候会看到蛇。

你不想不小心踩到一个,
小心蛇,小心蛇。

去查查看。

去查查看?

不完全是这个意思。

你可能会说,“我不知道
坚持这个词的意思,所以我查

了字典。”

这是当您通常在
网上或书本或字典中搜索

某些内容以获取更多信息时。

我查了字典。

你甚至可以说我查过。

如果有人说:“哦,你怎么对水獭了解这么多
?”

你可能会说,“哦,我查了”,或者,“我
上周查了一些关于它们的信息

这就是我对河獭的了解,
我查了。”

拉过来。

雨下得太大了,我不得
不停下车等雨停。

我不得不靠边停车。

在这里你会感觉到
开车不安全。

我没有继续开车,我把车停了下来。

这意味着您将汽车开到
路边,或者可能到加油站或

安全的地方并等待。

您可能会完全停止,或者只是
等待一段时间。

我们经常用这个短语动词来表示警察。

所以你可以说,“是的,我开得
太快了

。当我看到身后的警灯时,我
把车停了下来。”

但我们可以用更具体的方式
来谈论这种情况。

你可能会说他,那个警察,他把
我拉过来,他把我拉过来。

或者如果我们想间接使用这个,这
是一个非常常见的短语,你可能会

说,“我在去派对的路上
被拦住了,我被拦住了。”

这意味着有人正在对我采取行动

如果没有警察
在我身后,我不会停下来,我会继续开车。

那么这是谁做的呢?

好吧,我没有直接在我的句子中说,
但这句话总是意味着警察。

我被拦了下来。

有一些灯,一个警报器。

伙计,我被拦住了,我被拦住
了。

我希望这不会很快发生在你身上

推迟,推迟。

看这个。

我推迟学习短语动词太久了
,是时候开始今天了。

我推迟了,这意味着你在推迟一些事情,
你在拖延一些事情。

我不能再拖延了,我
必须从今天开始。

当我看到 Vanessa 上这节课大约 50 个
短语动词时,我知道是时候停止

推迟学习短语动词了。

今天是我的机会,加油。

忍受。

忍受?

不,我们不会提出任何问题。

你可能会说,“哦,我亲爱的丈夫
忍受了我糟糕的歌声,他忍受了

我糟糕的歌声。”

你想听可怕的歌声吗?

可能不是。

但如果有人忍受你糟糕的
歌声,他们会容忍它。

是的,他忍受了我糟糕的歌声,
因为他知道唱歌让我很开心

所以我们可以用 put up with 来容忍一些事情,
“是的,他忍受了我的歌声。”

或者我们可以将它用于某人,但这
有点苛刻。

如果你说:“我不知道他是怎么
忍受她的?”

好吧,假设两个人在约会
,这种情况下的女孩

有点困难。

好吧,你可能在谈论或八卦
他们的关系,你可能会说,“我不

知道他如何忍受她,我不
知道他如何容忍她。”

你在这里看到这不是
她唱歌的一部分吗?

不,这只是她的总体情况,她的性格,
她的个性。

说我
不能容忍那个人,这有点苛刻。

这比说我不能容忍
那个人做的这件事要强得多。

可以说:“我现在受不了你的
歌声。

请停下来,我正在努力学习。”

这与说“我
受不了你”不同。

这有点强。

所以确保如果你使用它,你在
非常强烈的情况下使用它。

逃跑。

我的狗懒得逃跑。

他知道食物在哪里,所以他
要留在这里。

他懒得跑了。

或者你小时候有没有试过离家
出走?

离家出走是常用的短语
,意思是逃跑。

我的狗知道食物在这里,所以他
不会逃跑。

他不会逃跑,因为
外面没有更好,有食物的地方更好

和孩子一样,好吧,你可能会
离家出走。

这个固定短语,是的,她
上周试图离家出走,但她只

成功到邻居家。

逃,逃。

碰到。

好吧,不完全是身体撞到
某人,但这是一个类似的想法。

看这句话,我不想
在徒步旅行的时候碰到熊。

是的,您当然不想
在徒步旅行时撞到熊。

但更可能的情况是意外
看到了熊,我不想碰到熊。

或者你可能会说,“我上周在杂货店遇到了我的高中
英语老师。”

本来没打算在那里见她的,只是
出乎意料。

我意外地看到了我的老师,我
在杂货店的老高中老师,我遇到

了我的老师。

或者我们可以用这个作为一种问题,
你永远猜不到我今天遇到了谁。

这是一个有趣的小问题,可以问某人,
然后他们会猜测非常随机的人。

你永远猜不到我今天遇到了谁。

好问题。

耗尽或耗尽。

昨天我们的牛奶和鸡蛋用完了,所以
我需要去商店,我们用完了。

我是不是带着牛奶和鸡蛋
跑出家门?

不,

这只是意味着什么都没有了,
一切都结束了。

我们的牛奶和鸡蛋用完了,
所以该去商店了。

但我们也可以只用用完。

看看这个。

没有牛奶了,抱歉,我们昨天用完了。

为什么我没有说我们的牛奶用完了?

好吧,我们已经知道上下文,我们
知道我们在谈论牛奶。

所以你可以说,“是的,对不起,我们
昨天用完了,我还没有买新的

牛奶。”

我们跑了出去。

坚持,坚持。

我试过吉他、钢琴、小提琴。

最后,我决定坚持打鼓。

你认为这意味着什么?

这意味着你正在继续做某事。

继续打鼓。

我停止弹吉他,停止弹
钢琴,停止拉小提琴,继续

打鼓。

我想我会坚持打鼓。

或者我们可以将它用于朋友。

我们可以说,
即使在困难时期,好朋友也会彼此相依为命。

即使在困难时期,他们也能继续他们的友谊

想来想去,想来想去。

在购买之前考虑大宗购买是个好主意

在你买车之前,你应该
三思而后行。

这是一个很好的短语,也许可以给别人
建议。

仔细想想,这意味着你需要认真考虑

在你做出决定之前考虑一下。

在购买之前,您需要考虑大宗
购买。

掉头向下。

不,这并不是真的在谈论身体
拒绝某些事情。

看看这句话。

我吃得太饱了,我不得不
拒绝甜点。

我喜欢甜点,但我太饱了,我
不得不拒绝甜点。

这意味着你拒绝了一些东西。

你甚至可以礼貌地使用它并说:
“对不起,我需要拒绝它。

我太饱了。

我需要拒绝甜点,因为我太饱了
。”

我们也可以为人们使用它。

就像我之前提到的其他一些
短语动词一样,它更严重一些。

如果你向你的女朋友求婚,你
是在向她求婚,她拒绝

了。

好吧,你可能会说,“她拒绝了我。”

这意味着她拒绝了我。

这对你的性格
或你是谁有更深层次的影响,非常严肃。

她拒绝了我,我不敢相信。

把关掉。

睡前一小时或更长时间关掉手机是个好习惯

把关掉。

这意味着您正在停止手机,但
我们可以想象您正在停止某些东西的流动,

因为我们也可以更形象地使用它

我们可能会说,有些人
在睡前关掉大脑有困难。

你躺在床上,一直在
想很多事情。

你需要关掉你的大脑才能
放松和睡觉。

你不想让你的大脑一直处于
关闭状态。

但在睡觉前,关掉
你的大脑很重要。

你正在阻止思想的
流动,能量的流动。

就像你需要关掉手机一样,
你也需要关掉你的

大脑。

翻身,翻身。

当我突然出现在派对上时,我的家人感到
惊讶。

你能猜到这是什么意思吗?

我出乎意料地出现了。

他们不认为我会来,然后
我敲了敲门,我就在那里。

我出乎意料地出现了。

或者你可以说我的猫走了两天
,然后他就突然出现了。

我不知道他在哪里,他没有告诉
我。

他刚一出现,就莫名其妙地出现
了。

热身。

说到猫,我的猫花了一段时间才对我产生好感

我的猫花了一段时间才对我暖和起来。

如果您知道
猫和狗之间的区别。

好吧,狗总是想要。

但是猫,有时它们需要更多的时间。

这就是热身,
开始喜欢某人的想法。

这需要时间。

我们可以想象有时
人们用来卷发的卷发器。

它不会立即升温,需要时间。

这就是某人或某事的想法,
我的猫花时间对我热身。

立刻,他没有坐在我的腿上爱
我。

不,他必须先确保我没事。

我们可以热身于某人或某事,但
我们也可以热身于更形象化的事物,

例如一个想法。

我们可能会说,“我不想得到蹦床。

但过了一段时间,我开始
接受这个想法。

我想了想,意识到,是的,它
可能很有趣,现在我们有了蹦床 。”

我开始接受这个想法。

小心。

哦,当心落石。

或者要小心,有时蜜蜂会在
附近的地面上筑巢,不要不看就踩到

小心。

这是用来警告某人,要注意。

徒步时要小心,有时熊会
意外地经过。

小心。

穿脱。

我早茶的能量
在中午左右开始消退。

很快。

我的茶中的能量
开始消退。

你能猜到这是什么意思吗?

它正在消失。

当我第一次喝茶时,我有很多精力
,然后它开始消退,它正在

消退。

我们也可以将其用于
您编写的内容。

例如,您可能会说标记
开始磨损。

几周前,我儿子非常兴奋,
因为他学会了写自己的名字。

他拿了一个标记。

在他午睡的时候,他把自己的名字写
在了床单上。

你可以在这里看到这个。

他到处都写着自己的名字。

这很有趣,记号笔是可洗的
,没什么大不了的。

他真的很兴奋。

现在标记开始磨损,
所以它正在消失。

但我相信他会写得越来越多,
因为他对自己的新技能感到非常兴奋。

短语动词第 50 号,你终于来了,
恭喜你,是为了解决问题。

看看这个。

我丈夫喜欢山,我喜欢
海滩。

因此,对于我们的下一个假期,我们将
需要解决一些问题。

我本可以说,“我们需要
为我们的假期制定一个互惠互利的解决方案

。”

有点太多了。

说“我们
需要解决一些问题”更为自然。

这意味着我们需要找到一个折衷方案。

有时,如果孩子打架,父母会将此留给孩子
,他们说:

“妈妈,帮帮我。

不,她这样做了。

不,他这样做了”,而父母
不想参与其中。

你的父母可能会说,“好吧,你们需要
自己解决一些问题。

这是我不会
参与的事情,你们两个都需要达成

某种妥协。”

你需要自己解决一些问题。

那你是怎么做的?

您是否开始对这些
短语动词进行热身?

如果你坚持练习它们,
随着时间的推移,它们会变得更好、更容易。

现在,我想让你思考
一下你刚刚学过的短语,并在评论中告诉

我你期待这个周末做什么

我迫不及待地想看看你要说
什么,看看你想出了什么。

好吧,非常感谢你
和我一起学习英语,下周五我会

在我的 YouTube 频道上再次见到你,上一堂新课。

再见。

下一步是下载我的免费电子书,
成为自信的英语

演讲者的五个步骤。

您将了解如何
自信而流利地说话。

不要忘记订阅我的 YouTube 频道
以获得更多免费课程。

非常感谢。

再见。