Page 41 - English Vocabulary in Use Pre Intermediate
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[7  Phrasal  verbs:  grammar  and  style



                   Look  at  Unit  16  on  the  form  and  meaning  of  phrasal  verbs  before  you  do  this  unit.

                   Grammar:  intransitive  verbs
                   Some  phrasal  verbs  are  intransitive  and  do  not  need  a  direct  object.
                  The  children  are  growing  up.  (=  getting  older  and  more  mature)
                  The  doctor  told  me  to  lie  down  on  the  bed.
                  Don’t  wait  out  there.  Please  come  in.  (=  enter)
                  I’m  going  to  stay  in  (=  stay  at  home)  this  evening.
                  With  these  verbs,  you  cannot  put  another  word  between  the  verb  and  adverb.

                  Grammar:  transitive  verbs

                  But  many  phrasal  verbs  are  transitive  and  do  need  a  direct  object.  With  some  of  these,  you
                  can  put  the  object  between  the  verb  and  adverb:
                  Put  on  your  shoes  Y   Turn  on  the  TV  ¥
                  Put  your  shoes  on  Y   Turn  the  TV  on¥
                  If  the  object  is  a  pronoun,  it  must  go  between  verb  and  adverb.
                  Put  them  on  Y  [NoT  Put-enther?]   Turn  it  on  Y  [NOT Farner it]
                  Note:  A  dictionary  will  show  you  if  you  can  put  a  word  between  the  verb  and  adverb:

                     use  a  control  to  switch  (a  piece  of  equipment)  on  or off  or  to:   70
                     increase  or  reduce  what  it  is  producing  «  Turn  off/out  the
                     light;  (M}  «  Who  turned  the  telly  on?(M]  J asked  him  to  turn
                     down  the  heating.  (M).«  Turn  the  sound  wp  ~  I can’t  hear
                     what  they're  saying.  (M]  «This programme’s  boring  =  shail  I   |
                     turn  over  (=  change’  the  station)'to  BBC?  [I]  #  This  sort  af   75
                     heater  turns off  (#  can  be  switched  off)  at  the  mains.  (I)  «


                  Style:  formal  or  informal
                  Some  phrasal  verbs  can  be  used  equally  in  written  or  spoken  English.  Sometimes  this  is
                  because  there  is  no  other  easy  way  to  express  the  meaning  of  the  phrasal  verb.
                  I  always  wake  up  early,  even  at  weekends.
                  The  car  broke  down  (=  went  wrong;  stopped  working)  on  the  motorway.
                  The  plane  couldn’t  take  off  because  of  bad  weather.
                  Thieves  broke  into  (=  entered  by  force  and  illegally)  the  house  and  took  money,  credit  cards
                     and  all  my  jewellery.

                   Informal  phrasal  verbs
                  But  most  phrasal  verbs  are  informal  and  are  more  common  in  spoken  English.  In  written
                  English  there  is  often  a  more  formal  word  with  the  same  meaning.
                  We  had  to  make  up a  story.  (=  invent/create  from  our  imagination)
                  I  can  usually  get  by  on  about  £200  a  week.  (=  manage)
                  You  can  leave  out  question  7.  (=  omit,  i.e.  you  don’t  need  to  do  question  7)
                  They’ve  got  a  problem  and  they  asked  me  to  sort  it  out.  (=  resolve  (it)  /  find  a  solution  /  do
                     something  about  it)




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