Collins Cobuild English Grammar (74 page)

BOOK: Collins Cobuild English Grammar
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She
looked after
her invalid mother.
She
sailed through
her exams.
She
fell down
the steps and broke her ankle.

or a verb followed by an adverb and a preposition:

You may
come up against
unexpected difficulties.
I
look forward to
reading it.
Fame has
crept up on
her almost by accident.

By combining a verb and an adverb or preposition in this way, you can extend the usual meaning of the verb or create a new meaning, different from any that the verb has on its own. You cannot, therefore, always guess the meaning of a phrasal verb from the usual meanings of the verb and the adverb or preposition. For example, if someone says
I give up
they do not give anything to anyone, nor is there any upward movement involved.

In the case of a few phrasal verbs, the first part is not found independently as a verb at all. For example, there are phrasal verbs
sum up
,
tamper with
, and
zero in on
, but no verbs
sum
,
tamper
, or
zero
.

Note that phrasal verbs are never written as a single word or with a hyphen.

3.84
    Most phrasal verbs consist of two words. These are explained below in paragraphs
3.85
to
3.110
. Three-word phrasal verbs are explained in paragraphs
3.111
to
3.113
.

intransitive phrasal verbs with adverbs

3.85
    Some phrasal verbs are used without an object. These phrasal verbs are generally verb plus adverb combinations.
Rosamund
went away
for a few days.
The boys
were fooling around
.
She
must have dozed off
.
3.86
    Here is a list of phrasal verbs that consist of a verb and an adverb with no object:
back away
back down
back off
balance out
barge in
bear up
boil over
bounce back
bow down
bow out
branch out
break away
break out
butt in
camp out
cast about
catch on
change down
change up
check up
chip in
climb down
close in
cloud over
club together
come about
come along
come apart
come away
come back
come down
come forward
come in
come on
come out
come round
come to
come up
cool off
creep in
crop up
cry off
cuddle up
curl up
cut in
die away
die down
die out
dine out
double back
doze off
drag on
drop back
drop by
drop out
ease up
ebb away
end up
fade away
fade out
fall apart
fall away
fall back
fall behind
fall out
fall over
fall through
fight back
fizzle out
flare up
fool around
forge ahead
get about
get ahead
get along
get by
get up
give in
glaze over
go ahead
go along
go around
go away
go back
go down
go on
go out
go under
go up
grow up
hang back
hang together
hit out
hold on
land up
lash out
let up
lie back
lie down
live in
look ahead
look back
look in
loom up
make off
meet up
melt away
mount up
move off
move over
nod off
opt out
own up
pass away
pay up
pine away
play around
pop up
press ahead
press on
push ahead
push on
rear up
ride up
ring off
rise up
roll about
roll in
roll over
rot away
run away
run out
rush in
seize up
sell up
set in
settle down
settle in
settle up
shop around
simmer down
sink in
sit around
sit back
sit down
slip up
speak up
splash out
spring up
stand back
stand down
stand in
stand out
start out
stay in
stay on
stay up
steam up
step aside
step back
step down
step in
stick around
stock up
stop by
stop off
stop over
tag along
tail away
tail off
taper off
tick over
touch down
tune in
wade in
wait about
wait up
walk out
waste away
BOOK: Collins Cobuild English Grammar
2.89Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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