Phrasal verbs represent a practically limitless group of verbs that can be combined with short adverbs or prepositions to produce new meanings. Here are some examples: Phrasal verbs are ubiquitous in ...
A phrasal verb is a verb that is combined with a preposition (e.g. in, on, with) or an adverbial particle (e.g. up, out, off) The preposition or adverbial particle extend the meaning of the verb ...
When I was young I didn't get on with my sister but now we're very good friends. I tried to get on with him but he was rude I found it impossible to be friends with him. His mother was a famous ...
The preposition, ‘on’, features in a good number of phrasal verbs. A phrasal verb consists of a verb with a preposition or adverb (or both at times), with a meaning different from those of its ...
In this category is, yet, the phrasal verb, ‘plan on’, which should not be confused with ‘plan to’. Well, in terms of meaning, they both indicate an intention to do something.