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Two Word Verbs

This document discusses two-word verbs, also known as multi-word verbs or phrasal verbs. It notes that phrasal verbs are a type of multi-word verb that are very common in spoken English. The document provides examples of intransitive and transitive phrasal verbs and explains that transitive phrasal verbs can be separated or non-separable depending on whether the direct object is a pronoun or noun.

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Truong le Xuan
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
293 views

Two Word Verbs

This document discusses two-word verbs, also known as multi-word verbs or phrasal verbs. It notes that phrasal verbs are a type of multi-word verb that are very common in spoken English. The document provides examples of intransitive and transitive phrasal verbs and explains that transitive phrasal verbs can be separated or non-separable depending on whether the direct object is a pronoun or noun.

Uploaded by

Truong le Xuan
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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TWO-WORD VERBS

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".
Phrasal verbs can be:
• intransitive (no direct object)
• transitive (direct object)
Phrasal verbs Meaning Examples Direct
object
intransitive get up rise from bed I don't like to get
phrasal verbs up.
He was late
cease to
break down because his car
function
broke down.

We will have to put the


put off postpone
transitive off meeting.
phrasal verbs
turn down refuse They turned down my offer.
Separable Phrasal Verbs
When phrasal verbs are transitive (that is, they have a direct
object),
we can usually separate the two parts. For example, "turn
down" is a separable phrasal verb. We can say: "turn down my
offer" or "turn my offer down". Look at this table:

my
 They turned down
transitive offer.
phrasal
verbs are my
separable  They turned down.
offer
However, if the direct object is a pronoun, we have no choice. We
must separate the phrasal verb and insert the pronoun between
the two parts. Look at this example with the separable phrasal
verb "switch on":

the
 John switched on
radio.
direct object
pronouns These
must go  John switched the radio on. are all
between the possible.
two parts of
 John switched it on.
transitive
phrasal
This is
verbs
 John switched on it. not
possible.

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