2000+ Common Phrasal Verbs in English and Their Meanings
An extensive list of 2000+ useful English phrasal verbs with meanings and pictures. Using this phrasal verbs dictionary to improve your English.
Table of Contents
What are Phrasal Verbs?
In English grammar, a phrasal verb is composed of two or three words – One verb is combined with a preposition (at, on, in) or an adverb (up, down). Some examples of phrasal verbs with the verb “GET” are “get at”, “get in”, “get out”, “get off”, “get away”, “get over”, “get back”… and they ALL have different meanings!
Each phrasal verb can also have multiple definitions. For example, GET OUT can mean:
- Leave or escape
- Become known (“Somehow the secret got out“)
- Say something with difficulty (“He could hardly get the words out for the tears”)
- Clean something (“This detergent will get most household stains out“)
- Spend free time out of the house (“You work too hard. You should get out more”)
- Phrasal verbs are used more frequently in everyday speech than in formal writing/ speaking. They are used often in everyday conversation by native speakers of English.
Phrasal Verbs Dictionary
Learn list of common phrasal verbs in English with meanings.
Common Phrasal Verbs
Phrasal Verbs with Act
List of useful phrasal verbs with Act in English:
- Act on: Act decisively on the basis of information received or deduced
- Act on: Take action against something
- Act on: Affect something
- Act out: Perform a scene from a play, a charade or an exercise
- Act out: Perform a fantasy in reality
- Act out: Express one’s feelings through disruptive actions
- Act out: Express ideas or desires through actions rather than words
- Act up: Misbehave; cause trouble
- Act up to: Equal in action; fulfill in practice
- Act upon: Take action on the basis of information received or deduced
Phrasal Verbs with Answer
List of common phrasal verbs with Answer in English:
- Answer back: Reply impertinently; to talk back
- Answer back: Reply to a question at a later time
- Answer for: Be held responsible for; to take the blame for something
- Answer for: Guarantee
- Answer for: Vouch for (someone); to attest to the character of (someone)
- Answer to: Be accountable or responsible to
- Answer to: Justify oneself to (someone)
- Answer to: Respond to (a name); to treat as one’s own name
Phrasal Verbs with Ask
List of phrasal verbs with Ask in English:
- Ask after: Enquire about someone’s health, how life is going.
- Ask around (round): Enquire of different people about something
- Ask for: Request
- Ask for: Increase the likelihood of something by persisting in some action; to invite
- Ask in: Invite someone to enter one’s house
- Ask out: Invite somebody, especially on a date
- Ask round: Invite someone to your house
- Ask over: Invite them to come from their house to your house
Phrasal Verbs with Back
List of essential phrasal verbs with Back in English:
- Back down: Take a less aggressive position in a conflict than one previously has or has planned to
- Back
into : Rely upon another team’s loss in order to advance to the post-season - Back off: Move backwards away from something
- Back off: Become less aggressive, particularly when one had appeared committed to act
- Back off: Lower the setting of
- Back onto: Reverse a vehicle onto something
- Back onto: Overlook something from the rear
- Back out: Reverse a vehicle from a confined space
- Back out: Withdraw from something one has agreed to do
- Back out: Undo a change
- Back up: Move backwards, especially for a vehicle to do so
- Back up: Move a vehicle
backward - Back up: Undo one’s actions
- Back up: Reconsider one’s thoughts
- Back up: Copy (data) as a security measure
- Back up: Provide support or the promise of support
- Back up: Halt the flow or movement of something
Phrasal Verbs with Be
List of phrasal verbs with Be in English:
- Be above: Be too good, classy or mature to do something; to disdain
- Be above: Outrank
- Be along: Arrive
- Be around: Be alive, existent, or present
- Be around: Be near; to socialize with
- Be cut out for: Be suitable, have the necessary qualities
- Be down: Be depressed
- Be down to: Be reduced or less
- Be down on: Have negative feelings toward someone
- Be down with: Be ill
- Be fed up: Be bored, upset or sick of something
- Be in for: Be able to expect or anticipate, generally said of something unpleasant
- Be in for: Be incarcerated for
- Be in on: Be a party to a secret shared by a small group of people
- Be on about: Talk about; mean, intend
- Be on to: Figure out; to realize the truth
- Be out for: Seek or pursue, especially to determinedly pursue something to one’s own benefit
- Be there for: Be available to provide comfort and support for someone, especially in a period of difficulty
- Be snowed under: Have too much work
- Be taken aback: Be shocked or surprised
- Be taken with: Like something or someone very much
- Be up for: To want to do something
- Be up to: Do or be involved in doing
- Be with: Have sex with
- Be with: Date or be boyfriend/girlfriend with
- Be with: Agree with someone
- Be with: Understand someone’s point or intention
Phrasal Verbs with Beat
List of common phrasal verbs with Beat in English:
- Beat down: Strike with great force
- Beat down: Haggle with someone to sell at a lower price
- Beat off: Waste time
- Beat out: Sound a rhythm on a percussion instrument such as a drum
- Beat out: Extinguish
- Beat out: Defeat by a narrow margin
- Beat up: Give a severe beating to, to assault violently hitting the victim repeatedly
- Beat up: Feel badly guilty and accuse oneself over something
Phrasal Verbs with Blow
List of important phrasal verbs with Blow in English:
- Blow away: Cause to go away by blowing, or by wind
- Blow away: Disperse or to depart on currents of air
- Blow away: Kill (someone) by shooting them
- Blow away: Flabbergast; to impress greatly
- Blow down: Knock over with an air current, most often wind
- Blow off: Let steam escape through a passage provided for the purpose
- Blow off: Shirk or disregard
- Blow off: Forcibly disconnect something by use of a firearm or explosive device
- Blow out: Extinguish something, especially a flame
- Blow out: Deflate quickly on being punctured
- Blow out: Be driven out by the expansive force of a gas or vapour
- Blow over: Blow on something causing it to topple
- Blow over: Be knocked down by wind
- Blow over: Pass naturally; to go away; to settle or calm down
- Blow past: Easily overcome or go around a safeguard or limit
- Blow up: Explode or be destroyed by explosion
- Blow up: Cause (something or someone) to explode
- Blow up: Inflate or fill with air
- Blow up: Enlarge or zoom in
- Blow up: Suddenly get very angry
Phrasal Verbs with Break
List of commonly used phrasal verbs with Break in English:
- Break away: Leave suddenly
- Break away: Become separated, literally or figuratively
- Break down: Fail, to cease to function
- Break down: Render or to become unstable due to stress, to collapse physically or mentally
- Break down: Render or to become weak and ineffective
- Break down: Decay, to decompose
- Break down: Divide into parts to give more details, to provide a more indepth analysis of
- Break down: Digest
- Break even: Neither gain nor lose money
- Break even: Stay the same; to neither advance nor regress
- Break in: Enter a place by force or illicit means
- Break in: Cause to function more naturally through use or wear
- Break off: End a relationship.
- Break off: To stop (temporarily)
- Break off: To become separate (from something)
- Break into: Enter illegally or by force, especially in order to commit a crime
- Break into: Open or begin to use
- Break into: Successfully enter a profession or business
- Break into: Begin suddenly
- Break out: Escape, especially forcefully or defiantly
- Break out: Begin suddenly; to emerge in a certain condition
- Break through: To break a way through (sth solid)
- Break through: To make new and important discoveries
- Break up: Break or separate into pieces; to disintegrate or come apart
- Break up: End a relationship
- Break up: Dissolve; to part
- Break up: Break or separate into pieces
- Break up: Stop a fight; to separate people who are fighting
Phrasal Verbs with Bring
List of common phrasal verbs with Bring in English:
- Bring about: Cause to take place
- Bring about: Accomplish, achieve
- Bring along: Bring someone or something to
certain place. - Bring around: Persuade or convince someone.
- Bring around: Bring something with you when you visit.
- Bring around: Get someone talking about something.
- Bring back: Fetch something
- Bring back: Cause someone to remember something from the past
- Bring back: Reenact an old rule or law
- Bring down: Make a legitimate rulership lose their position of power
- Bring down: Reduce
- Bring down: Make something fall to the ground
- Bring down: Make someone feel bad emotionally
- Bring forth: Produce, bear as fruit
- Bring forth: Give birth
- Bring forth: Create, generate, bring into existence
- Bring forth: Display, produce, bring out for display
- Bring forward: Make something happen earlier than originally planned
- Bring in: Move something indoors
- Bring off: Succeed in doing something considered to be very difficult
- Bring out: Elicit, evoke, or emphasize a particular quality
- Bring out: Place (something new for public sale) on the market; roll out
- Bring out: Make a shy person more confident
- Bring out: Cause a visible symptom such as spots or a rash
- Bring round: Bring something when coming
- Bring round: Resuscitate; to cause to regain consciousness
- Bring round: Change someone’s opinion or point of view
- Bring to: Restore consciousness
- Bring to: Make something equal to a different amount
- Bring up: Mention
- Bring up: Raise
- Bring up: Uncover, to bring from obscurity
- Bring up: Turn on power or start, as of a machine
- Bring up: Vomit
Phrasal Verbs with Call
List of phrasal verbs with Call in English:
- Call away: Summon; to cause to depart
- Call down: Pray for; to request from God
- Call for: Shout out in order to summon (a person)
- Call for: Ask for in a loud voice
- Call for: Request, demand
- Call for: Necessitate, demand
- Call for: Stop at a place and ask for (someone)
- Call in: Communicate with a base etc, by telephone
- Call in: Summon someone, especially for help or advice
- Call off: Recall; to cancel or call a halt to
- Call on: Visit (a person); to pay a call to
- Call on: Select (a student in a classroom, etc.) to provide an answer
- Call on: Request or ask something of (a person); to select for a task
- Call on: Have recourse to; to summon up
- Call on: Correct; to point out an error or untruth
- Call out: Specify, especially in detail
- Call out: Order into service; to summon into service
- Call out: Challenge; denounce; point out; charge
Phrasal Verbs with Carry
List of common phrasal verbs with
- Carry off: Transport away
- Carry off: Act convincingly; to succeed at giving the impression of (e.g.) knowledge, confidence, or familiarity
- Carry off: Cause death
- Carry on: Continue or proceed as before
- Carry on: Take baggage or luggage onto an
airplane , rather than check it - Carry on: Have or maintain
- Carry on: Act or behave; especially to misbehave so as to attract attention
- Carry on: Have an illicit sexual relationship
- Carry out: Hold while moving it out
- Carry out: Fulfill
- Carry over: Transfer (something) to a later point in time
Phrasal Verbs with Check
List of phrasal verbs with Check in English:
- Check out: Confirm and pay for goods and services at a facility when leaving
- Check out: Withdraw (an item), as from a library, and have the withdrawal recorded
- Check out: Record (someone) as leaving the premises or as taking something therefrom, as from a library or shop
- Check out: Examine, inspect, look at closely, ogle; to investigate
- Check out: Prove (after an investigation) to be the case / in order
- Check up: Verify through brief investigation or examination
- Check up on: Examine or inspect something in order to determine its condition
Phrasal Verbs with Come
List of phrasal verbs with Come in English:
- Come about: Come to pass; to develop; to occur; to take place; to happen
- Come across: Give an appearance or impression; to project a certain image
- Come across: Find, usually by accident
- Come after: Pursue, follow
- Come after: Follow, to succeed, to be the successor of
- Come along: Accompany
- Come along: Progress; to make progress
- Come apart: Break, separate
- Come around: Change one’s mind
- Come at: Get to, especially with effort or difficulty
- Come at: Attack, to harass
- Come at: Accept (a situation); to agree to do; to try
- Come away: Become separated from something away
- Come away: Distance oneself (from)
- Come back: Return to one’s possession, especially of memories
- Come back: Return to a former state, usually a desirable one
- Come back: Retort
- Come before: Appear publicly in front of someone superior
- Come before: Be of greater importance (than)
- Come before: Be judged, decided or discussed by authority
- Come before: Precede
- Come between: Affect negatively or cause discord between (someone) and another person
- Come by: Obtain; to get, especially by chance or involuntarily
- Come by: Come near to; to pass; to visit
- Come down: Descend, fall down, collapse
- Come down: Be demolished
- Come down: Decrease
- Come down: Reach a decision
- Come down: Be passed through time
- Come down: Return from an elevated state of consciousness or emotion
- Come down on: Punish
- Come down upon: Criticise, reprimand severely
- Come down to: Reach by moving down or reducing
- Come down to: Depend upon, basically, ultimately or in essence
- Come down with: Contract or get; to show symptoms of an illness
- Come for: Search for something or someone, in order to catch them/it
- Come forth: Move forward and into view, to emerge, to appear
- Come from: Have as one’s birthplace or nationality
- Come in: Enter
- Come in: Arrive
- Come in: Become relevant, applicable or useful
- Come in: Become available
- Come in: Have a strong enough signal to be able to be received well
- Come in: Join or enter; to begin playing with a group
- Come in: Begin transmitting
- Come in: Function in the indicated manner
- Come in: Finish a race or similar competition in a particular position
- Come in for: Be subjected to
- Come into: Inherit (money)
- Come into: Be a factor in
- Come off: Have some success, to succeed
- Come off: Appear; to seem; to project a certain quality
- Come on: Show sexual or relational interest through words or sometimes actions
- Come on: Appear on a television broadcast
- Come on: Progress, to develop
- Come on: Encounter, discover; to come upon.
- Come on: Make a romantic or sexual advance to; to hit on
- Come on: Start to
- Come on: Be discovered, be revealed
- Come on: Be published, be issued
- Come on: End up or result
- Come on: Come out of the closet
- Come on: Be deducted from
- Come on: Leave (out of), exit from
- Come on: Express one’s opinion openly
- Come out in: Be afflicted by
- Come out in: Say something unexpected
- Come out of: To develop from something
- Come out with: Say something publicly and unexpectedly
- Come out with: Make something available/to be produced or published
- Come over: Affect
- Come round: Change one’s opinion to a prevailing one
- Come round: Recover consciousness, to come to
- Come round: Visit someone’s home or other regular place
- Come through: Survive, to endure
- Come through: Succeed
- Come through: Not to let somebody down, keep one’s promise
- Come through with: Provide something needed
- Come to: Recover consciousness after fainting etc.
- Come to: Total; to amount to
- Come to: Devote attention to in due course; to come around to
- Come to: Befall; to affect; to happen to; to come upon
- Come to: Regard or specify, as narrowing a field of choices by category
- Come together: Arrive at a destination with someone after having travelled there with each other
- Come under: Come underneath (something)
- Come under: Be included or classified under
- Come under: Be subjected to, be under the auspices of
- Come up: Come towards, to approach
- Come up: Emerge or become known, especially unexpectedly
- Come up: Come to attention, present itself; to arrive or appear
- Come up: Appear
- Come up: Draw near in time
- Come up: Rise (above the horizon)
- Come up: Begin to feel the effects of a recreational drug
- Come up to: Approach
- Come up with: Invent, create, or think of.
- Come upon: Come across; to encounter; to stumble upon; to discover or find
- Come upon: Befall; to affect; to happen to
- Come with: Join and come along
Phrasal Verbs with Crack
List of phrasal verbs with Crack in English:
- Crack down: Enforce more stringently or more thoroughly
- Crack down on: Enforce laws or punish (something) more vigilantly
- Crack on: Continue at a (normally uninteresting) task
- Crack on: Continue
apace - Crack up: Laugh heartily
- Crack up: Cause to laugh heartily
- Crack up: Become insane; to suffer a mental break down
- Crack up: Cry up; to extol
- Crack out: Produce in large volumes mechanically or as if by machine
Phrasal Verbs with Cut
List of common phrasal verbs with Cut in English:
- Cut back: Reduce spending
- Cut back: Reduce consumption
- Cut down: Bring down by cutting
- Cut down: Reduce the amount of something
- Cut off: Stop providing funds to someone
- Cut off: End abruptly
- Cut off: Interrupt (someone speaking)
- Cut off: Turn off or switch off (an electrical device)
- Cut out: Refrain from (doing something, using something etc.), to stop/cease (doing something)
- Cut out: Remove, omit
- Cut out: Separate from a herd
- Cut out: Stop working, to switch off; (of a person on the telephone etc.) to be inaudible, be disconnected
- Cut out: Leave suddenly
- Cut out: Arrange
- Cut through: Deal with an issue quickly
- Cut through: Take a shortcut through
- Cut up: Cut into smaller pieces, parts, or sections
- Cut up: Lacerate; wound by multiple lacerations; injure or damage by cutting, or as if by cutting
- Cut up: Severely criticize or censure; to subject to hostile criticism
- Cut up: Comprise a particular selection of runners
Phrasal Verbs with Fall
List of useful phrasal verbs with Fall in English:
- Fall about: Laugh so much that one’s entire body moves somewhat uncontrollably
- Fall apart: Disintegrate
- Fall apart: Be emotionally in crisis
- Fall away: Cease to support a person or cause
- Fall behind: Be late (for a regular event)
- Fall behind: Be progressively below average in performance
- Fall down: Fall to the ground, to collapse
- Fall down: Fail
- Fall for: Be fooled; to walk into a trap or respond to a scam or trick
- Fall for: Fall in love with someone
- Fall in: Collapse inwards
- Fall in: Come to an end; to terminate; to lapse
- Fall in with: Join (a group of people)
- Fall in with: Accept
- Fall into: Go into something by falling
- Fall into: Enter something without having planned it
- Fall into: Be classified as; to fall under
- Fall off: Become detached or to drop from
- Fall off: Diminish in size, value etc.
- Fall on: Experience; to suffer; to fall upon
- Fall on: Be assigned to; to acquire a new responsibility, duty or burden
- Fall on: Occur on a particular day
- Fall out: Come out of something by falling
- Fall out: Cease to be on friendly terms
- Fall out: Leave one’s current location to report for duty at a new location
- Fall through: Be unsuccessful, abort, come to nothing/
naught ; to be cancelled; not to proceed - Fall under: Belong to for purposes of categorization
- Fall upon: Fall on; to experience; to suffer
Phrasal Verbs with Fill
List of phrasal verbs with Fill in English:
- Fill in: Fill; to replace material that is absent or has been removed
- Fill in: Inform somebody, especially to supply someone missing or missed information
- Fill in: Substitute for somebody or something
- Fill in: Beat up; to physically assault
- Fill out: Complete a form or questionnaire with requested information
- Fill out: Have one’s physique expand with maturity or with surplus weight
- Fill up: Fill the tank of a vehicle with fuel
- Fill up: Annoy, or displease, by taunting, or by excessive nagging
- Fill up: Satisfy someone’s hunger
Phrasal Verbs with Get
List of common phrasal verbs with Get in English:
- Get about: Be mobile, physically active
- Get about: Become widely known
- Get about: Visit a variety of different places
- Get across: Cross; to move from one side (of something) to the other, literally or figuratively
- Get across: Make an idea evident; to successfully explain a thought or feeling; put over
- Get after: Move into action in pursuit of something
- Get after: Move into action in attempt to catch or defeat another
- Get after: Attempt to convince another to move into action
- Get ahead: Progress
- Get ahead of: Move in front of
- Get along: Interact or coexist well, without argument or trouble
- Get along: Survive; to do well enough
- Get along with: Have a good relationship with someone
- Get along with: Deal with, handle
- Get around: Move to the other side of an obstruction
- Get around: Come around something
- Get around: Avoid or bypass an obstacle
- Get around: Circumvent the obligation and performance of a chore
- Get around: Transport oneself from place to place
- Get around: Be sexually promiscuous
- Get around to: Eventually begin or return to some procrastinated task
- Get at: Manage to gain access to
- Get at: Understand or ascertain by investigation
- Get at: Mean, signify
- Get at: Attack verbally or physically; to annoy, bother
- Get at: Persuade by intimidation, to tamper with
- Get at: Contact someone
- Get away: Move away (from)
- Get away: Avoid capture; to escape (from)
- Get away: Take a break from one’s present circumstances
- Get away: Start moving; to depart
- Get away: Slip from one’s control
- Get away from: Start to talk about something that is not relevant to the discussion
- Get away with: Eescape punishment for
- Get back: Return to where one came from
- Get back: Retrieve, to have an item returned
- Get back: Do something to hurt or harm someone who has hurt or harmed you
- Get back at: Retaliate against; to take revenge on
- Get back to: Return contact with
- Get behind: Support
- Get behind with: Be late paying instalments for something
- Get by: Subsist; to succeed, survive, or manage, at least at a minimal level
- Get down: Bring or come down; descend
- Get down: Depress; discourage; fatigue
- Get down: Swallow
- Get down: Relax and enjoy oneself completely; be uninhibited in one’s enjoyment
- Get down: Duck or take cover, usually to avoid harm
- Get down: Leave the table after dining
- Get down: Record in writing
- Get down on: Criticise
- Get down to: Start working seriously
- Get in: Get into or inside something, literally or figuratively
- Get in: Enter a place; to gain access
- Get in: Secure membership at a selective school
- Get in: Be elected to some office
- Get in with: Become involved or associated with
- Get into: Move into an object, such that one ends up inside it
- Get into: Reach into an object
- Get into: Become involved in a discussion, issue, or activity
- Get into: Enter an unfavourable state
- Get into: Make behave uncharacteristically
- Get it: Be punished or scolded
- Get it on: Have sex
- Get it on: Engage in a fight
- Get it on: Hurry up; to get a move on
- Get it together: To be well-organized and prepared
- Get it over with: Do or finish, especially said of something unpleasant
- Get it up: Achieve a penile erection
- Get off: Move from being on top of (something) to not being on top of it
- Get off: Move (something) from being on top of (something else) to not being on top of it
- Get off: Disembark, especially from mass transportation
- Get off: Stop (doing something), to desist from (doing something)
- Get off: Stop using a piece of equipment, such as a telephone or computer
- Get off: Complete a shift or a day’s work
- Get off: Stop touching or interfering with something or someone
- Get off: Excite or arouse, especially in a sexual manner
- Get off: Experience an orgasm or other sexual pleasure
- Get off: Kiss; to smooch
- Get off: Escape (with usually only mild consequences)
- Get off: Fall asleep
- Get off: Behave in an presumptuous, rude, or intrusive manner
- Get off on: Be excited or aroused by; to derive pleasure from
- Get off on: Have a sexual encounter with
- Get on: Board or mount (something), especially a vehicle
- Get on: Be successful
- Get on: Progress (with)
- Get on: Become late
- Get on: Become old
- Get on: Gave a good relationship
- Get on: Commence
- Get on to: Contact (someone) in order to raise or discuss a certain matter
- Get on to: Progress to; to start working on
- Get on for: Be near a time
- Get on with: Proceed with; to begin or continue, especially after an interruption
- Get on with: Have a good relationship with
- Get onto: Move onto an object, especially one on which it is possible to stand
- Get onto: Contact a person or organisation about a particular matter
- Get onto: Connect, especially to the Internet or a network
- Get onto: Scold someone
- Get onto: Introduce someone to something
- Get out: Leave or escape
- Get out: Come out of a situation ; to escape a fate
- Get out: Help someone leave
- Get out: Leave a vehicle such as a car
- Get out: Become known
- Get out: Spend free time out of the house
- Get out: Publish something, or make a product available
- Get out: Say something with difficulty
- Get out: Clean something. To eliminate dirt or stains
- Get out of: Leave, exit, or become free of
- Get out of: Circumvent some obligation entirely
- Get out of: Leave or exit a place
- Get over: Overcome
- Get over: Recover (from)
- Get over: Forget and move on
- Get over: Successfully communicate; to get across
- Get over with: Do something quickly and hastily; without procrastination
- Get rid of: Dispose (of); to remove; to abolish; to lose
- Get stuck in: Dedicate a large amount of effort towards
- Get stuck into: Start eating
- Get stuck into: Criticise someone; tell off; to get angry at; to attack
- Get taken in: Be fooled; to fall for
- Get taken in: Be unofficially fostered
- Get through: Overcome; to endure
- Get through: Complete; to finish
- Get through: Be made successfully
- Get through to: Make someone understand
- Get through to: Reach a stage in a competition
- Get to: Reach, arrive at
- Get to: Have an opportunity to or be allowed to
- Get to: Affect adversely; to upset or annoy
- Get to: Track down and intimidate
- Get together: Meet socially
- Get up: Move in an upwards direction; to ascend or climb
- Get up: Rise from one’s bed
- Get up: Move from a sitting or lying position to a standing position; to stand up
- Get up: Materialise; to grow stronger
- Get up: Bring together, amass
- Get up: Gather or grow larger by accretion
- Get up: Criticise
- Get up: Dress in a certain way, especially extravagantly
- Get up to: Do something, especially something that you should not do
- Get used: Become accustomed to something; to acclimate; to adjust
- Get with: Impregnate
- Get with: Align oneself with
Phrasal Verbs with Give
List of frequently used phrasal verbs with Give in English:
- Give away: Make a gift of (something)
- Give away: Formally hand over a bride to the bridegroom; often by her father
- Give away: Unintentionally reveal a secret, or expose someone
- Give away: Concede an advantage in weight, time, height etc.
- Give back: Return, restore
- Give back: Contribute money, goods or, especially, services for charitable purposes, as if in return for one’s own success
- Give forth: Emit or release something
- Give forth: Give off an emanation
- Give in: Collapse or fall
- Give in: Relent, yield, surrender or admit defeat
- Give in to: Allow a feeling or desire to control you
- Give in to: Criticise harshly or punish someone for something.
- Give it up for/to: Applaud.
- Give of oneself: Devote oneself unselfishly to a task, especially to give time and energy
- Give off: Emit; to produce and send forth
- Give out: Issue; to distribute
- Give out: Break down, get out of order, fail
- Give out: Complain, sulk, chastise
- Give over: Entrust (something) to another
- Give over: Devote or resign to a particular purpose or activity
- Give over: Give up; abandon; desert; stop
- Give up: Surrender (someone or something)
- Give up: Stop or quit (an activity, etc)
- Give up: Relinquish (something)
- Give up: Lose hope concerning (someone or something)
- Give up: Abandon (someone or something)
- Give up: Admit defeat, to capitulate
- Give up on: Lose faith in or stop believing in something or someone.
- Give up on: Stop feeling hope
- Give way: Yield to persistent persuasion
- Give way: Collapse or break under physical stresses
- Give way: Give precedence to other road users
- Give way
to : Be replaced by something better, cheaper, more modern, etc - Give way to: Allow a vehicle to pass in front.
- Give way
to : Surrender to strong emotions - Give yourself up: Surrender to the police or authorities.
Phrasal Verbs with Go
List of commonly used phrasal verbs with Go in English:
- Go about: Deal with something
- Go about: Circulate
- Go across: Move to another side or place
- Go after: Pursue in attempt to catch another
- Go after: Pursue an object or a goal
- Go against: Violate; to breach; to break
- Go against: Be unfavourable to someone
- Go against: Be contrary to a trend, feeling or principle
- Go against: Oppose; to resist
- Go ahead: To begin
- Go ahead with: To continue with something
- Go all out: Reserve nothing; to put forth all possible effort or resources
- Go along: Participate, cooperate, or conform
- Go around: Move or spread from person to person
- Go around: Share with everyone
- Go at: Try to solve a problem a specific way; to undertake a task
- Go away: Depart or leave a place
- Go away: Travel somewhere, especially on holiday or vacation
- Go away: Become invisible, vanish or disappear
- Go back: Abandon, desert, betray or fail someone or something
- Go before: To exist or happen in an earlier time
- Go below: Go below deck on a ship; to leave the top deck of a ship
- Go by: Pass or go past without much interaction
- Go by: Be called, to use as a name
- Go by: Follow; to assume as true for the purposes of making a decision, taking an action, etc.
- Go down: Descend; to move from a higher place to a lower one
- Go down: Disappear below the horizon; to set
- Go down: Decrease; to change from a greater value to a lesser one
- Go down: Fall (down), fall to the floor
- Go down: Be received or accepted
- Go down: Be recorded or remembered (as)
- Go down: Take place, happen
- Go down: perform oral sex
- Go down: Stop functioning, to go offline
- Go down with: To become ill with a particular illness
- Go for: Try for, to attempt to reach
- Go for: Undertake (an action)
- Go for: Attack
- Go for: Develop a strong interest in, especially in a sudden manner; to be infatuated with
- Go for: Favor, accept
- Go for: Apply equally to
- Go for it: Put maximum effort into achieving something
- Go for it: Decide to do something; especially after a period of hesitation
- Go forward: Move clocks ahead
- Go forward: Progress
- Go in: Be obscured by clouds
- Go in for: To take an exam or enter a competition
- Go in for: Like, have an interest in
- Go in for: Make a career choice
- Go in with: Join, enter
- Go into: Get involved in; to investigate or explore
- Go into: Divide exactly; to be a factor of
- Go off: Explode
- Go off: Fire, especially accidentally
- Go off: Explode metaphorically; to become very angry
- Go off: Begin clanging or making noise
- Go off: Depart; to leave
- Go off: Like less
- Go off with: Elope, run away with someone
- Go off with: Steal
- Go on: Continue in extent
- Go on: Continue an action
- Go on to: Proceed
- Go on about: Talk about a subject frequently or at great length
- Go on: Use and adopt (information) in order to understand an issue, make a decision, etc.
- Go on: Happen (occur)
- Go on at: Keep criticizing somebody or telling them what to do, etc:
- Go on with: Continue doing.
- Go out: Leave, especially a building
- Go out: Leave one’s abode to go to public places
- Go out: Be eliminated from a competition
- Go out: Be turned off or extinguished
- Go out: Discard or meld all the cards in one’s hand
- Go out: Become out of fashion
- Go out: Have a romantic relationship, one that involves going out together on dates
- Go out: Fail
- Go out: Spend the last moments of a show (while playing something)
- Go out for: Become a candidate, apply for something
- Go out to: Feel sympathy with someone
- Go over: Look at carefully; to scrutinize; to analyze
- Go over: Create a response or impression
- Go over to: Go on a journey
- Go over to: Change to something different
- Go so far as: Reach an unexpected extent in doing something
- Go past: Pass without stopping
- Go round: Be or have enough of something
- Go round: Circulate
- Go round: Visit
- Go through: Travel from one end of something to the other
- Go through: Examine or scrutinize (a number or series of things), especially in a regular order
- Go through: Undergo, suffer, experience
- Go through: Wear out (clothing etc. )
- Go through: Progress to the next stage of something
- Go through: Reach an intended destination after passing through some process
- Go through with: Carry out (something planned or promised)
- Go to: Attend an event or a sight
- Go to: Attend classes at a school as a student
- Go to: Tend to support
- Go together: Harmonize or be compatible
- Go towards: Be a contribution to
- Go under: Descend into a body of water; to founder
- Go under: Collapse or fail, e.g. by going bankrupt
- Go under: Be named; to call oneself
- Go up: Be built or erected
- Go up: Rise or increase in price, cost, or value
- Go up: Be consumed by fire
- Go up: Forget lines or blocks during public performance
- Go up for:Of the fielding side, to appeal for the batsman or batswoman to be out
- Go with: Choose or accept (a suggestion)
- Go with: Correspond or fit well with, to match
- Go without: Be deprived of
Phrasal Verbs with Hang
List of phrasal verbs with Hang in English:
- Hang about: Stay, linger or loiter
- Hang about: Spend time or be friends
- Hang on: Wait a moment (usually imperative)
- Hang on: Hold, grasp, or grip
- Hang on: Keep; to store something for someone
- Hang on: Pay close attention
- Hang on: Continually believe in something; to have faith in
- Hang on: Persevere
- Hang out: Spend time doing nothing in particular
- Hang out: Be unyielding; to hold out
- Hang over: Be threatening, to be imminent
- Hang together: Be self-consistent
- Hang up: Put up to hang
- Hang up: Terminate a telephone call
Phrasal Verbs with Hold
List of common phrasal verbs with Hold in English:
- Hold back: Act with reserve; to contain one’s full measure or power
- Hold back: Contain; stop
- Hold back: Delay the progress of, especially in school
- Hold down: Restrain; to check
- Hold down: Continue, to hold and to manage well
- Hold in: Restrain oneself
- Hold off: Delay someone or something temporarily; to keep at bay
- Hold off: Delay commencing
- Hold off: Delay commencing an action
- Hold on: Grasp or grip firmly
- Hold on: Keep; to store something for someone
- Hold on: Wait a short time
- Hold on: Remain loyal
- Hold out: Wait, or refuse in hopes of getting something better
- Hold out: Survive, endure
- Hold out: Withhold something
- Hold out: Set something aside or save it for later
- Hold over: Save, delay
- Hold up: Wait or delay
- Hold up: Impede; detain
- Hold up: Support or lift
- Hold up: Fulfill / fulfill or complete one’s part of an agreement
- Hold up: Rob at gunpoint
Phrasal Verbs with Jump
List of phrasal verbs with Jump in English:
- Jump around: Move erratically by jumping
- Jump at: Accept something enthusiastically
- Jump down: Leave an elevated position to a lower position by one jump
- Jump in: Enter something quickly. Usually a mode of transport
- Jump off: Move from an elevated place by one jump
- Jump on: Board a vehicle
- Jump on: Attack verbally, to criticise excessively
- Jump out: Be obviously different or special; to capture an observer’s attention at once
- Jump up: Move from one position to a higher position by one jump
Phrasal Verbs with Keep
List of common phrasal verbs with Keep in English:
- Keep across: Keep abreast of or up to date with; to keep people informed of
- Keep around: Keep something near one
- Keep at: Continue with something difficult
- Keep away: Refrain from coming (near)
- Keep away: Prevent from coming (near)
- Keep away from: Avoid or evade
- Keep away from: Deny (someone) access to
- Keep back: Maintain a safe distance
- Keep down: Repress
- Keep down: Restrain or control (a sound)
- Keep down: Cause not to increase or rise
- Keep down: Not to vomit
- Keep down: Stay concealed by not standing up
- Keep from: Control yourself, refrain
- Keep in: Not allow someone out
- Keep off: Not talk about
- Keep off: Not touch something
- Keep on: Persist or continue
- Keep on: Persist in talking about a subject to the annoyance of the listener
- Keep on: Cause or allow to remain in an existing position
- Keep out: Refrain from entering a place or condition
- Keep out: Restrain someone or something from entering a place or condition
- Keep out of: Stay away from (a place or condition)
- Keep out of: Restrain someone or something from entering (a place or condition)
- Keep to oneself: Purposely avoid interaction with others; to be introverted
- Keep up: Stay even or ahead
- Keep up: Ensure that one remains well-informed about something
- Keep up with: Move at the same rate
Phrasal Verbs with Kick
List of useful phrasal verbs with Kick in English:
- Kick around: Abuse or mistreat; to bully
- Kick around: Wander loose; to float around; to hang around
- Kick back: Relax
- Kick down: Break or demolish something by physical bodily force
- Kick in: Start, connect, or take effect, especially in a sudden way
- Kick in: Contribute, especially to a collection of money
- Kick off: Make the first kick in a game or part of a game
- Kick off: Start; to launch
- Kick off: Dismiss; to expel; to remove from a position
- Kick off: Die or quit permanently
- Kick off: Shut down or turn off suddenly
- Kick off: Suddenly become more active
- Kick off: Be overcome with anger, to start an argument or a fight
- Kick off: Have a fight or argument
start - Kick out: Eject, throw out, or forcefully remove
- Kick out: Stop, stall, or disconnect suddenly
- Kick up: Raise, to increase (a price)
- Kick up: Show anger (about something)
- Kick up: Function improperly, to show signs of
disorder , (of an illness) to flare up
Phrasal verbs with Knock
List of common phrasal verbs with Knock in English:
- Knock about: Spend time companionably; to hang around
- Knock about: Engage in a relaxing activity in; to hang around in
- Knock about: Be located in or mislaid in
- Knock about: Hit or behave violently towards
- Knock back: Stun; to surprise
- Knock back: Reject; to refuse
- Knock down: Hit or knock (something), intentionally or accidentally, so that it falls
- Knock down: Demolish
- Knock down: At an auction, to declare (something) sold with a blow from the gavel
- Knock down: Reduce the price of
- Knock down: Drink fast
- Knock down: Disassemble for shipment
- Knock it off: Stop doing something; desist
- Knock off: Bump or hit so that something falls off
- Knock off: Quit; stop doing work or other activity
- Knock off: Kill someone
- Knock off: Reduce or remove
- Knock off: Rob
- Knock off: Make a copy of, as of a design
- Knock out: Strike or bump (someone or something) out
- Knock out: Render unconscious, as by a blow to the head
- Knock out: Put to sleep
- Knock out: Exhaust
- Knock out: Complete, especially in haste; knock off
- Knock out: Cause a mechanism to become non-functional by damaging or destroying it
- Knock out: Communicate (a message) by knocking
- Knock over: Bump or strike something in such a way as to tip it
- Knock over: Rob; to stage a heist of
- Knock together: Assemble something quickly; to knock up
- Knock up: Put together, fabricate, or assemble, particularly if done hastily or temporarily
- Knock up: Impregnate, especially out of wedlock
Phrasal Verbs with Lay
List of phrasal verbs with Lay in English:
- Lay by: Put away for future use; put aside; store; save; hoard; to build up as savings
- Lay down: Give up, surrender, or yield (e.g. a weapon)
- Lay down: Intentionally take a fall while riding a motorcycle, in order to prevent a more serious collision
- Lay down: Specify, institute, enact, assert firmly, state authoritatively, establish or formulate
- Lay down: Lie down; to place oneself in a reclined or horizontal position, on a bed or similar, for the purpose of resting
- Lay low: Topple or overcome; to cause to fall; (of a person) to knock out
- Lay off: Cease, quit, stop (doing something)
- Lay off: Stop bothering, teasing, or pestering someone; to leave (someone) alone
- Lay on: Provide (food or drinks) for free
- Lay on: Repeatedly say (particular things)
- Lay out: Arrange in a certain way, so as to spread or space apart
- Lay up: Make a layup with (a basketball)
Phrasal Verbs with Live
List of phrasal verbs with Live in English:
- Live down: Get used to something shameful
- Live off: Survive by consuming only a certain thing or things
- Live on: Survive solely by consuming a certain thing
- Live on: Endure
- Live out: Not reside on the premises of one’s employer
- Live out: Live some distance away or outside of a town/city
- Live out: Fulfill or act out a dream or fantasy or aspiration
- Live out: Pass time or to pass the remainder of one’s life
- Live through: Survive a difficult period or event
- Live up: Fulfill the expectations placed upon
Phrasal Verbs with Let
List of phrasal verbs with Let in English:
- Let down: Allow to descend
- Let down: Disappoint; to betray or fail somebody
- Let in: Let someone or something come in
- Let in on: Disclose information to someone; to tell somebody a secret or share privileged information
- Let off: Cause to explode or come out; to release
- Let off: Forgive and not punish
- Let on: Reveal, disclose, or divulge
- Let out: Release
- Let out: Allow to operate at higher speed by adjusting controls
- Let out: Enlarge by adjusting one or more seams
- Let out: Of sound, to emit
- Let out: Disclose
- Let past: Allow someone to pass one
- Let up: Cease; stop
Phrasal verbs with Look
List of essential phrasal verbs with Look in English:
- Look after: Watch or protect; to keep safe
- Look ahead: Consider the future, to anticipate future events
- Look back: Think about something that happened in the past
- Look down on: Regard someone with a feeling of superiority
- Look around: Inspect a building or area
- Look around: Search a place
- Look around: Turn one’s head to see what is behind oneself
- Look at: Consider
- Look for: Search for; to seek
- Look forward to: Feel pleased and excited about something that is going to happen
- Look in (on sby): Visit a person or place for a short time
- Look into: Investigate, explore, or consider
- Look on: Watch; to observe
- Look on as: Treat someone in a particular role; to consider someone in a particular way
- Look out: Look from within to the outside
- Look out: Be vigilant and aware
- Look out for: Take care of someone, make sure someone is cared for
- Look out for: Keep alert and try to see
- Look round: Inspect a building or area
- Look round: Search a place
- Look round: Turn one’s head to see what is behind oneself
- Look through: Gaze through a gap or aperture
- Look through: Search, either with the eyes or by hand
- Look through: Pretend not to see something or someone who is clearly visible
- Look to: Seek inspiration or advice or reward from someone
- Look up: Have better prospects, to improve
- Look up: Obtain information about something from a text source
- Look up to: Show respect or admiration for
- Look upon: Consider or regard something in a specific manner
- Look upon: Gaze at something; to look on
- Look upon as: Consider, regard
Phrasal Verbs with Make
List of important phrasal verbs with Make in English:
- Make after: Chase
- Make away with: Steal
- Make for: To move towards something
- Make for: To contribute, to cause, lead to
- Make into: Cause (the first object) to become (the second object); to change or transform
- Make it up to: Pay back; to return someone a previous good deed
- Make of: Form an opinion about (someone or something)
- Make off: Leave somewhere in a hurry
- Make off: To escape
- Make off with: Steal
- Make out: Draw up (a document etc.), to designate (a cheque) to a given recipient, payee
- Make out: Manage, get along; to do (well, badly etc.)
- Make out: Represent; to make (something) appear to be true
- Make out: Kiss passionately
- Make out of: Construct from; to create (something) using (a material or substance)
- Make over: Renovate or to convert to a different use, particularly houses, offices, or rooms within them
- Make over: Create a new physical look, especially with a new hairstyle, cosmetics, or clothes
- Make over: Improve upon and/or take in a new direction
- Make towards: Head in the direction
- Make up: Compensate, fill in or catch up
- Make up: Invent, imagine, or concoct (a story, claim, etc.)
- Make up: Assemble, or mix
- Make up: Apply cosmetics or makeup to
- Make up: Resolve, forgive or smooth over an argument or fight
- Make up for: To compensate for something, to replace
- Make up to: Do something to show that you are sorry about the problems you have caused someone
- Make way: Make progress
Phrasal Verbs with Mess
List of common phrasal verbs with Mess in English:
- Mess about: Misbehave
- Mess about: Be in a casual non-committal relationship
- Mess about: Play with; to toy with; to waste the time of (a person)
- Mess around: Fiddle idly
- Mess around: Joke, kid, or play
- Mess around: Have a sexual relationship, especially one which is non-commital
- Mess up: Make a mess of; to untidy, disorder, soil, or muss
- Mess up: Cause a problem with; to introduce an error or mistake in; to make muddled or confused; spoil; ruin
- Mess up: Botch, bungle; to perform poorly on
- Mess up: Make a mistake; to do something incorrectly; to perform poorly
- Mess up: Cause (another person) to make unwanted mistakes in a given task, usually through distraction or obnoxious behavior
- Mess up: Damage; injure
- Mess up: Manhandle; beat up; rough up
- Mess up: Discombobulate, utterly confuse, or confound psychologically; to throw into a state of mental disarray
- Mess with: Interfere with
- Mess with: Diss; to put down
- Mess with: Joke around with or dupe someone, in either a friendly or unfriendly manner
Phrasal Verbs with Move
List of phrasal verbs with Move in English:
- Move forward: Make progress
- Move on: Leave somewhere for another place
- Move on: Start dealing with something else
- Move out: Vacate one’s place of residence or employment
- Move out: Leave one’s present location
- Move up: Move one’s position to allow others to occupy a place
Phrasal Verbs with Pass
List of phrasal verbs with Pass in English:
- Pass away: Die
- Pass by: Travel past without stopping
- Pass
by past (something) without stopping; to ignore, to disregard: Travel - Pass by: Of a period of time: to come to an end, to elapse
- Pass down: Transmit information or give property to younger generations.
- Pass off: Happen
- Pass off: Misrepresent something
- Pass on: Convey or communicate
- Pass on: Skip or decline
- Pass on: Die
- Pass out: Faint; to become unconscious
- Pass out: Distribute, to hand out
- Pass over: Ignore someone and give a job, reward, etc, to someone more junior.
- Pass over: Ignore, refuse to discuss.
- Pass round: Distribute, give to people present.
- Pass through: Visit a place without stopping or only stopping briefly
- Pass to: Give ownership or responsibility to someone.
- Pass up: Refuse (not accept); forgo
Phrasal Verbs with Pick
List of common phrasal verbs with Pick in English:
- Pick apart: Overcome by skilled execution
- Pick at: Eat unwillingly
- Pick at: To pull or touch something several times
- Pick off: Remove by picking
- Pick off: Shoot one by one
- Pick off: Dispose of tasks, obstacles, opponents etc. one by one
- Pick on: Bully, harass or make fun of a victim; to bother or harass
- Pick on: Select (a person) for a task, etc.
- Pick out: Distinguish
- Pick out: Ornament or relieve with lines etc. of a different, usually lighter, colour
- Pick through: Search something that is disordered for something.
- Pick up: Lift; to grasp and raise
- Pick up: Collect an object, especially in
passing - Pick up: Clean up; to return to an organized state
- Pick up: Collect a passenger
- Pick up: Collect and detain (a suspect)
- Pick up: Improve, increase or speed up
- Pick up: Restart or resume
- Pick up: Learn, to grasp; to begin to understand
- Pick up: Receive (a radio signal or the like)
- Pick up: Notice, detect or discern, often used with “on”
- Pick up: Point out (a person’s behaviour, habits or actions) in a critical manner
- Pick up: Meet and seduce somebody for romantic purposes, especially in a social situation
- Pick up: Answer a telephone
- Pick up: Pay for
- Pick up
after : Tidy a mess someone else has made. - Pick up on: Correct someone when they say something wrong.
- Pick up on: Notice something that most people don’t.
- Pick up on: React to something.
- Pick up on: Comment on something said earlier in a conversation.
- Pick yourself up: Recover from a fall or problem
Phrasal Verbs with Play
List of phrasal verbs with Play in English:
- Play along: Take part in a charade, deception, or practical joke
- Play around: Behave in a silly, or childish, or irresponsible way
- Play around: Work with in a non-serious manner
- Play at: Pretend to be a different person while playing a game
- Play at: Do something in a manner that lacks seriousness, commitment, or professionalism
- Play down: Make or attempt to make something seem less important, likely, or obvious
- Play off: Pretend not to be embarrassed, upset, impressed or otherwise affected by something
- Play out: Play music to accompany the end of, or as a final segment in (a programme, broadcast etc.)
- Play out: Occur in a certain manner
- Play up: Misbehave
- Play up: Make or attempt to make something appear more important, likely or obvious; to showcase or highlight
Phrasal Verbs with Pull
List of useful phrasal verbs with Pull in English:
- Pull ahead: Start being in a winning position (e.g. in a race or competition)
- Pull apart: Become separated as a result of pulling
- Pull apart: Rigorously investigate the basis of an idea or theory
- Pull away: Move ahead
- Pull in: Pull something, so that comes inside
- Pull in: Earn
- Pull in: Approach a station
- Pull off: Remove by pulling
- Pull off: Achieve; to succeed at something difficult
- Pull off: Turn off a road
- Pull off: Begin moving and then move away; to pull away
- Pull on: Put on (clothes) by tugging
- Pull out: Withdraw; especially of military forces; to retreat
- Pull out: Use coitus interrupt us as a method of birth control
- Pull out: Remove something from a container
- Pull out: Maneuver a vehicle from the side of a road onto the lane
- Pull over: Come to a stop, and turn off the road
- Pull over: Cause to pull over
- Pull up: Lift upwards or vertically
- Pull up: Pull forward
- Pull up: Retrieve; get
- Pull up: Drive close towards something, especially a curb
Phrasal Verbs with Put
List of common phrasal verbs with Put in English:
- Put (effort) into: To try
- Put across: Explain or state something clearly and understandably
- Put aside: Save (money)
- Put aside: Ignore or intentionally disregard (something), temporarily or permanently
- Put asunder: Sunder; disjoin; separate; disunite; divorce; annul; dissolve
- Put away: Place out of the way, clean up
- Put away: Store, add to one’s stores for later use
- Put away: Consume (food or drink), especially in large quantities
- Put away: Send (someone) to prison
- Put away: Knock out an opponent
- Put away: Take a large lead in a game, especially enough to guarantee victory
- Put back: Return something to its original place
- Put back: Postpone an arranged event or appointment
- Put back: Drink fast; to knock down alcohol
- Put back: Change the time in a time zone to an earlier time
- Put by: Preserve food by canning, freezing, drying, etc.
- Put by: Perform an action without attracting attention
- Put by: Save money
- Put by: Run a ship aground intentionally to avoid a collision
- Put down: Insult, belittle, or demean
- Put down: Pay
- Put down: Halt, eliminate, stop, or squelch, often by force
- Put down: Euthanize (an animal)
- Put down: Write (something)
- Put down: Terminate a call; to hang up
- Put down: Add a name to a list
- Put down: Make prices, or taxes, lower
- Put down: Place a baby somewhere to sleep
- Put down: Land
- Put down: Drop someone off, or let them out of a vehicle
- Put down: Cease, temporarily or permanently, reading (a book)
- Put down as: Assume someone has a particular character from very little information
- Put down for: Record that someone has offered to help, or contribute something
- Put down to: State the cause of a situation
- Put forward: Propose for consideration
- Put forward: Change the time in a time zone to a later time
- Put in: Place inside
- Put in: Apply, request, or submit
- Put in: Contribute
- Put in: Call at, arrive at, or enter a place (e.g., to enter a harbor or port)
- Put in practice: Make (something) a practical reality
- Put off: Procrastinate
- Put off: Delay (a task, event, etc.)
- Put off: Distract; to disturb the concentration of
- Put off: Cause to dislike; to discourage (from doing)
- Put on: Don (clothing, equipment or the like)
- Put on: Fool, kid, deceive
- Put on: Assume, adopt or affect; to behave in a particular way as a pretense
- Put on: Play (a recording)
- Put on: Initiate cooking or warming, especially on a stovetop
- Put on: Perform for an audience
- Put oneself across: Explain one’s ideas and opinions clearly so that another person can understand them and get a picture of your personality
- Put out: Place outside or eject
- Put out: Produce
- Put out: Injure a part of the body, especially a joint
- Put out: Extinguish (a flame or light)
- Put over: State, or explain a concept in a clear, understandable manner
- Put past: Conclude that (someone) would not do something
- Put through: Connect
- Put through: Cause to endure
- Put to: Ask or pose a question, or make a proposal
- Put together: Assemble, construct, build or formulate
- Put towards: Make a financial contribution
- Put up: Place in a high location
- Put up: Hang or mount
- Put up: Cajole or dare to do something
- Put up: Store away
- Put up: House, shelter, or take in
- Put up: Present, especially in “put up a fight”
- Put up: Provide funds in advance
- Put up: Make available, to offer
- Put up with: Endure, tolerate, suffer through, or allow, especially something annoying
- Put forward: To propose or suggest
Phrasal Verbs with Run
List of useful phrasal verbs with Run in English:
- Run about: Be very busy doing many different things
- Run across: Cross by running
- Run across: Find or discover by chance
- Run after: Chase
- Run after: Make a determined effort to win someone’s affections
- Run against: Oppose, make difficulties.
- Run along: Leave; to make one’s way somewhere else
- Run around: Be very busy doing many different things
- Run around after: Spend a lot of time doing things for another person or group of people
- Run away: Flee by running
- Run away: Leave home
- Run away with: Leave secretly with another person
- Run away with: Steal and get away with it
- Run away with: Be misled
- Run away with: Overwhelm, get the better of
- Run away with: Be superior or outstanding in something
- Run back: Take someone home by car; to give someone a lift to their house
- Run back: Rewind a film or cassette
- Run by: Inform someone briefly of the main points of an idea
- Run by: Briefly stop at a location for a particular purpose
- Run down: Hit someone with a car or other vehicle and injure or kill them
- Run down: Criticize someone or an organisation, often unfairly
- Run down: Find something or someone after searching for a long time
- Run down: Lose power slowly
- Run down: Read quickly a list or other short text
- Run down: Reduce the size or stock levels of a business, often with a view to closure
- Run for it: To run very quickly in order to escape from someone or something
- Run in: Arrest
- Run in: Use new machinery at less than full speed, preventing damage
- Run into: Enter by running
- Run into: Collide with
- Run into: Encounter or meet unexpectedly
- Run into: Cause to blend into
- Run into: Reach a large figure
- Run low: Near the end of a supply of something; to be nearly running out
- Run off: Flee or depart quickly
- Run off: Make photocopies, or print
- Run off: Write something quickly
- Run off: Pour or spill off or over
- Run off: Chase someone away
- Run off: Operate by a particular energy source
- Run off with: Leave with someone with the intention of living with them or marrying them
- Run off with: Steal or abscond
- Run on: Continue without interruption
- Run on: Using a certain time zone
- Run on: Continue talking for a long time
- Run on: Operate with a particular energy source
- Run out: Use up; to consume all of something
- Run out: Expire, to come to an end
- Run out: Extend a piece of material, or clothing
- Run out on: Leave a partner or commitment suddenly and without prior warning
- Run over: Exceed the allotted time
- Run over: Cross by running
- Run over: Drive over, causing injury or death
- Run over: Describe briefly
- Run over: Rehearse quickly
- Run over: Overflow
- Run past: Bring an idea or proposal to the attention of someone in order to obtain their opinion
- Run through: Summarise briefly
- Run through: Repeat something
- Run through: Use completely, in a short space of time
- Run through: Pervade, of a quality that is characteristic of a group, organisation, or system
- Run through: Impale a person with a blade, usually a sword
- Run to: Reach a particular maximum amount, size, value, etc.
- Run to: Reach the limit of one’s abilities or tastes
- Run up: Hasten to a destination
- Run up: Make something, usually an item of clothing, very quickly
- Run up: Bring a flag to the top of its flag pole
- Run up: Rise; to swell; to grow; to increase
- Run up: Accumulate a debt
- Run up: Thrust up, as anything long and slender
- Run up against: Begin to encounter problems with someone or something
- Run up on: To confront someone with hostility
- Run with: Proceed with; accept
Phrasal Verbs with See
List of phrasal verbs with See in English:
- See in: Welcome
- See into: Escort into, especially a place of shelter
- See out: Accompany a guest when he or she leaves
- See out: Continue something until completion; to watch an activity develop to a conclusion
- See through: Find something to be visually transparent
- See through: Not be deceived by something that is false or misleading
- See through: Provide support or cooperation to (a person) throughout a period of time
- See through: Do something until it is finished
- See through: Constitute ample supply for one for
- See to: Take care of; to effect; to make happen
- See to: Serve or care for
Phrasal Verbs with Send
List of phrasal verbs with Send in English:
- Send away: Dismiss from one’s presence
- Send away: Send to a particular place for a long time, as a family member, an employee, etc.
- Send away for: Write to a business or other organisation, requesting a thing
- Send back: Return (something) to its origin
- Send back: Remind (someone) of a previous time in the past
- Send down: Suspend or expel (an undergraduate) from university
- Send down: Commit (someone) to a prison term
- Send down: Demote a player within the levels of professional baseball
- Send off: Send; to dispatch
- Send out for: Make an order for something to be delivered, especially takeaway food
- Send up: Imitate someone or something for the purpose of satirical humour
- Send up: Put in prison
Phrasal Verbs with Set
List of common phrasal verbs with Set in English:
- Set about: Initiate or begin some action
- Set about: Attack
- Set aside: Separate and reserve something for a specific purpose
- Set back: Delay or obstruct
- Set back: Remove from or allow distance
- Set back: Cost money, as
- Set down: Write
- Set forth: Begin a journey or expedition
- Set in: Take root, become established
- Set off: Leave; to begin a journey or trip
- Set off: Begin; to cause; to initiate
- Set off: Cause to explode, let off
- Set off: Make angry
- Set off: Offset, to compensate for: to reduce the effect of, by having a contrary effect
- Set on: Encourage someone, or an animal, to attack someone
- Set out: Explain something, or give exact details, usually in writing
- Set out: Go out, leave
- Set out: Start an activity with the intention of finishing it
- Set up: Ready something for use
- Set up: Logically order
- Set up: Cause to happen
- Set up: Trap or ensnare
- Set up: Arrange for an outcome; to tamper or rig
- Set up: Gel or harden
- Set up: Provide the money or other support that someone needs for an important task or activity
- Set up: Establish someone in a business or position
- Set up: Trick someone in order to make them do something
- Set upon: Attack someone
Phrasal Verbs with Speak
List of phrasal verbs with Speak in English:
- Speak for: Speak on somebody’s behalf
- Speak for: Claim, reserve, or occupy
- Speak for: Represent an intrinsic quality
- Speak for oneself: Provide an opinion only on one’s own behalf
- Speak for oneself: Expressing disagreement with an opinion expressed by another
- Speak for oneself: Have obvious meaning; to require no explanation
- Speak of: Bespeak; show; indicate; foretell; suggest
- Speak out: Assert or promote one’s opinion; to make one’s thoughts known
- Speak to: Resonate with, to feel emotionally relevant to
- Speak up: Talk more loudly or plainly
- Speak up: Make oneself or one’s opinions known; to advocate or assert oneself
Phrasal Verbs with Stand
List of useful phrasal verbs with Stand in English:
- Stand aside: Step sideways to make a space for someone else
- Stand aside: Leave a job or position voluntarily so that someone else can have it instead
- Stand aside: Temporarily recuse oneself from action or decision-making in some domain
- Stand back: Maintain a safe distance from a hazard
- Stand back: Abstain from participation
- Stand by: Wait in expectation of some event; to make ready
- Stand by: Remain loyal or faithful to
- Stand by: Support; to continue to support despite things being bad
- Stand by: Do nothing. To be inactive in a situation
- Stand by: Be ready to provide assistance if required
- Stand by: Wait; to stop pursuing or fighting
- Stand for: Tolerate
- Stand in for: To act as a double or substitute for
- Stand off: Stand some distance apart from something or someone
- Stand off: Prevent any would-be attacker from coming close by adopting an offensive posture
- Stand out: Be obvious or conspicuous, in contrast to one’s surroundings
- Stand out: Be extraordinary and different or to have features and qualities which make someone or something special.
- Stand up: Rise from a lying or sitting position
- Stand up: Bring something up and set it into a standing position
- Stand up: Avoid a prearranged meeting, especially a date, with (a person) without prior notification; to jilt or shirk
- Stand up for: Speak or act in support or defense
- Stand up to: Object to or interfere with the actions of (someone seen as bullying, pushy, or controlling)
- Stand up to: Withstand, to weather, to survive in spite of
Phrasal Verbs with Take
List of commonly used phrasal verbs with Take in English:
- Take aback: Surprise or shock; to discomfit
- Take after: Resemble (a parent or ancestor) in appearance or habit
- Take against: Stop liking someone; to become unfriendly toward
- Take apart: Dismantle something into its component pieces
- Take aside: Get someone alone to talk to them
- Take away: Remove something and put it in a different place
- Take away: Remove something, either material or abstract, so that a person no longer has it
- Take away: Subtract or diminish something
- Take away: Leave a memory or impression in one’s mind that you think about later
- Take away: Make someone leave a place and go somewhere else
- Take away: Prevent, or limit, someone from being somewhere, or from doing something
- Take away from: Make something seem not so good or interesting
- Take back: Retract an earlier statement
- Take back: Cause to remember some past event or time
- Take back: Resume a relationship
- Take back: Regain possession of something
- Take back: Return something to a vendor for a refund
- Take down: Remove something from a wall or similar vertical surface to which it is fixed
- Take down: Remove something from a hanging position
- Take down: Write down as a note, especially to record something spoken
- Take down: Remove a temporary structure such as scaffolding
- Take down: Lower an item of clothing without removing it
- Take for: Regard as
- Take for: Consider mistakenly
- Take for: Defraud; to rip off
- Take in: Receive (goods) into one’s home for the purpose of processing for a fee
- Take in: Shorten (a garment) or make it smaller
- Take in: Absorb or comprehend
- Take it away: Begin, especially used to launch a performance of some sort (usually imperative and/or exclamatory)
- Take it out in: Accept as payment
- Take it out on: Unleash one’s anger on [a person or thing other than the one that caused it]
- Take it upon oneself: Assume personal responsibility for a task or action
- Take off: Remove
- Take off: Imitate, often in a satirical manner
- Take off: Leave the ground and begin flight; to ascend into the air
- Take off: Become successful, to flourish
- Take off: Depart
- Take off: Quantify
- Take off: Absent oneself from work or other responsibility, especially with permission
- Take on: Acquire, bring in, or introduce
- Take on: Begin to have or exhibit
- Take on: Assume responsibility for
- Take on: Attempt to fight or compete with
- Take out: Remove
- Take out: Escort someone on a date
- Take over: Adopt a further responsibility or duty
- Take over: Relieve someone temporarily
- Take over: Buy out the ownership of a business
- Take over: Annex a territory by conquest or invasion
- Take over: Become more successful (than someone or something else)
- Take pity: Show compassion (towards)
- Take through: Explain something to someone.
- Take to: Adapt to; to learn, grasp or master
- Take to: Enter; to go into or move towards
- Take to: Begin, as a new habit or practice
- Take up: Pick up
- Take up: Begin doing (an activity) on a regular basis
- Take up: Address (an issue)
- Take up: Occupy; to consume (space or time)
- Take up: Shorten by hemming
- Take up: Accept (a proposal, offer, request, etc.) from
- Take up: Resume
- Take up with: Form a close relationship with (someone)
- Take upon oneself: Assume personal responsibility for
Phrasal Verbs with Throw
List of phrasal verbs with Throw in English:
- Throw away: Discard (trash, garbage, or the like), to toss out, to put in the trash, to dispose of
- Throw away: Waste, to squander
- Throw down: Cause something one is holding to drop, often forcefully
- Throw in: Add something extra free of charge
- Throw off: Confuse; especially, to lose a pursuer
- Throw off: Introduce errors or inaccuracies; to skew
- Throw on: Hastily put on (clothes)
- Throw out: Discard; to dispense with something; to throw away
- Throw out: Dismiss or expel someone from any longer performing duty or attending somewhere
- Throw out: Offer an idea for consideration
- Throw out: Produce in a haphazard fashion
- Throw up: Vomit
- Throw up: Produce something new or unexpected
- Throw up: Cause something such as dust or water to rise into the air
Phrasal Verbs with Turn
List of common phrasal verbs with Turn in English:
- Turn against: Rebel or oppose to something formerly supported
- Turn against: Set against or in opposition to something
- Turn against: Use to the disadvantage or injury of
- Turn around: Physically rotate horizontally 360 degrees
- Turn around: Change to the opposite direction from a previous position
- Turn around: Reverse the expected outcome of a game, usually from a losing position to a winning one
- Turn around: Reverse a trend, usually towards a more favorable outcome
- Turn around: Be duplicitous
- Turn around: Consider from a different viewpoint
- Turn around: Produce; to output; to generate
- Turn around: Effect a positive reversal of a trend
- Turn around: Make a situation worse by trying to make it better
- Turn back: Reverse direction and retrace one’s steps
- Turn back: Return to a previous state of being
- Turn back: Prevent or refuse to allow passage or progress
- Turn back: Adjust to a previous setting
- Turn back: Fold something back; to fold down
- Turn down: Refuse, decline, or deny
- Turn down: Reduce the power, etc. of something by means of a control, such as the volume, heat, or light
- Turn down: Reposition by turning, flipping, etc. in a downward direction
- Turn in: Submit something; to give
- Turn in: Relinquish; give up; to tell on someone to the authorities
- Turn in: Go to sleep; retire to bed
- Turn into: Transform into; become
- Turn off: Power down; to stop a device by switching it off
- Turn off: Repulse, disgust, or discourage
- Turn off: Leave a road; to exit
- Turn on: Depend upon; to pivot around, to have as a central subject
- Turn on: Power up (a device), to start, to cause to start operating
- Turn on: Start operating; to power up, to become on
- Turn on: Violently rebel against; to suddenly attack
- Turn on: Fill with enthusiasm; to intoxicate, give pleasure to
- Turn out: Result; end up
- Turn out: Attend; show up
- Turn out: Extinguish a light or other device
- Turn out: Become apparent or known
- Turn out: Produce; make
- Turn out: Leave a road
- Turn out: Remove from a mould, bowl etc.
- Turn out: Refuse service or shelter; to eject or evict
- Turn over: Flip over; to rotate uppermost to bottom
- Turn over: Relinquish; give back
- Turn over: Produce, complete, or cycle through
- Turn over: Generate (a certain amount of money from sales)
- Turn over: Give up control (of the ball and thus the ability to score)
- Turn over: Cause extensive disturbance or Disruption to (a room, storage place, etc.), e.g. while searching for an item, or ransacking a property
- Turn round: Revolve or rotate around a centre
- Turn round: Turn so as to be facing in the opposite direction
- Turn round: Change one’s opinion or attitude (especially when becoming hostile etc.)
- Turn round: Put into an opposing position; to reverse
- Turn round: Make (a ship, airplane etc.) ready for departure
- Turn round: Process; to complete work on (something), especially with a view to sending it on in a finished state
- Turn to: Become, to degenerate into
- Turn to: Consult for advice
- Turn up: Show up; to appear suddenly or unexpectedly
- Turn up: Cause to appear; to find by searching, etc.
- Turn up: Increase the amount of something by means of a control, such as the volume, heat, or light
- Turn up: Reposition by rotating, flipping, etc. upwards
- Turn up: Belay or make fast a line on a cleat or pin
- Turn upside down: Flip over; to rotate top to bottom
- Turn upside down: Thoroughly examine
Phrasal Verbs with Walk
List of phrasal verbs with Walk in English:
- Walk away: Withdraw from a problematic situation
- Walk away: Survive a challenging or dangerous situation without harm
- Walk away from: Abandon or leave; to shun
- Walk in on: Enter suddenly or unexpectedly while something is happening; to intrude or interrupt by entering
- Walk into: Collide with
- Walk into: Fall into (a trap), especially one that could have been avoided with more care
- Walk it off: Recover from (a minor injury) or digest (a large meal) by walking around
- Walk out: Go out with; to be romantically involved
Phrasal Verbs with Wash
List of phrasal verbs with Wash in English:
- Wash away: Eliminate, or destroy by fast moving water, such as in a flood, or a high sea
- Wash away: Eliminate, in a figurative sense
- Wash down: Help to swallow by drinking a liquid, after eating something, or taking a pill
- Wash down: Wash something completely from top to bottom
- Wash off: Remove (or be removed) by washing
- Wash out: Remove something by washing
- Wash out: Wear away by the flow of water; to erode
- Wash out: Cancel due to bad weather
- Wash out: Lose traction while going around a turn, especially in cycling, motorsports and skiing/snowboarding
- Wash over: Pass unnoticed so that one is unaffected by it
- Wash over: Affect the emotions of (a person) suddenly and overwhelmingly
- Wash over: Surge over the banks, or other retaining structure
- Wash up: Clean the utensils, dishes etc. used in preparing and eating a meal
- Wash up: Wash one’s hands and/or face, often around mealtimes
- Wash up: Carry an object to land
Phrasal Verbs with Work
List of useful phrasal verbs with Work in English:
- Work on: Shape, form or improve something
- Work on: Exercise influence on someone
- Work out: Calculate
- Work out: Make sense of
- Work out: Smooth
- Work out: Conclude with the correct solution
- Work out: Succeed
- Work out: Habitually exercise rigorously, especially by lifting weights, in order to increase strength or muscle mass or maintain fitness
- Work out: Used other than as an idiom: see work, out
- Work over: Improve a prototype, or first draft
- Work over: Physically attack in order to cause injury
- Work sb out: Understand sb’s behaviour or nature
- Work smt off: Get rid of unpleasant feelings by doing physical activity
- Work sth out: Understand sth by thinking about it
- Work sth out: Solve a problem or issue
- Work through: Deal with, resolve a problem, often emotional.
- Work up: Raise; to excite; to stir up
- Work up: Develop
Phrasal Verbs with Try
List of phrasal verbs with Try in English:
- Try back: Phone back
- Try for: Make an attempt to get something
- Try it on: Provoke someone by being annoying or behaving badly
- Try it on: Attempt to get something, usually by deceit, without great hopes of success
- Try on: Put clothes on to see if they fit
- Try out: Test
- Try out: Test something to see if you like it or want to buy it
- Try out: for Be tested for a sports team
Phrasal Verbs with Think
List of phrasal verbs with Think in English:
- Think about/of: Consider something before making a decision
- Think ahead: Plan for a future situation; to think carefully about what might happen in the future
- Think over: Consider something carefully
- Think through: Consider all the possibilities and outcomes of a situation
- Think up: Create or invent something, such as a story or an excuse
Phrasal Verbs with Spring
List of phrasal verbs with Spring in English:
- Spring back: Return to original position
- Spring on: Surprise someone
- Spring from/ Spring up: Appear suddenly
- Spring for: Pay for generously
Other Common Phrasal Verbs
- Account for: Explain by relating circumstances
- Account for: Be the primary cause of
- Account for: Constitute in amount or portion
- Account for: Destroy or put out of action
- Account to: Answer to; to be responsible to
- Admire to: Be enthusiastic about doing
- Adopt out: Send a son or daughter away to live in another country
- Age out: Become too old for an activity, program or institution; to become too mature for a behavior
- Aim at: Design for a particular audience
- Aim at/to: Intend to do or achieve
- Allow for: Take into account when making plans
- Attend to: Diligently work on; to pay attention to
- Bail out: Rescue, especially financially
- Bail out: Leave (or not attend at all) a place or a situation
- Bail out: Sell all or part of one’s holdings in stocks, real estate, a business, etc.
- Ball out: Cry intensely; to sob or weep
- Ball up: Crush into a ball shape
- Ball up: Coil up into a ball
- Ball up: Hunch over and pull in one’s arms and legs
- Balls up: Do something badly. To ruin a job
- Bear on: Be relevant to
- Bear out: Corroborate, prove, or confirm; to demonstrate
- Bear upon: Be relevant to
- Bear with: Be patient with
- Believe in: Ascribe existence to
- Believe in: Believe that (something) is right or desirable
- Believe in: Have confidence in the ability or power of
- Block off: Obstruct
- Block off: Book, set aside
- Block out: Prevent from entering or penetrating
- Block out: Prevent (a thought) from entering one’s mind
- Boil down: Become reduced
- Boil off: Remove by boiling
- Boil off: Be removes by boiling
- Boil over: Boil to such an extent as to overflow its container
- Boil up: Cook or prepare by boiling
- Book in: Reserve an appointment for
- Bottom out: Touch or drag along the ground
- Branch out: Expand in the manner of branches
- Branch out: Attempt something new or different, but related
- Brighten up: Make cheerful
- Bubble over: Be very enthusiastic, or highly excited
- Bubble over: Be successful on a modest scale, without yet being fully established
- Buck up: Become encouraged, reinvigorated, or cheerful
- Buck up: Encourage or refresh; to hearten
- Buck up: Pass on to higher authority for resolution
- Buckle down: Put forth the needed effort
- Buckle up: Fasten one’s seat belt or safety belt
- Build up: Accumulate, to pile up, to increase in stages
- Build up: Strengthen
- Bump into: Collide with
- Bump into: Cause (a thing) to collide with
- Bump into: Meet by chance
- Burn down: Cause (a structure) to burn to nothing
- Burn down: Burn completely, so that nothing remains
- Burn out: Become extinguished due to lack of fuel
- Burn out: Tire due to overwork
- Burn up: Catch fire and burn until destroyed
- Burn up: Anger; to annoy
- Calm down: Become less excited, intense, or angry
- Cancel out: Neutralize the effect of something
- Catch on: Begin to understand; to realize
- Catch on: Become popular; to become commonplace; to become the standard
- Catch up: Entangle
- Catch up: Be brought up to date with news
- Catch up: Bring someone else up to date with the news
- Catch up: Reach something that had been ahead
- Cheer up: Become happy
- Cheer up: Make someone happy
- Chew out: Lecture, scold, reprimand, or rebuke
- Chew up: Chew so as to make something pulpy
- Chicken out: Shy away from a daring task
- Chill out: Relax or take time out; to calm down
- Chill out: Hang out; spend time together with another person or group
- Clean out: Clean, especially to tidy by removing the contents
- Clean out: Empty completely; to remove all money or possessions from
- Clean up: Make an area or a thing clean; to pick up a mess; to tidy
- Clean up: Become clean, handsome, smart in appearance
- Clean up: Make a large profit
- Clear away: Leave, disappear
- Clear out: Completely empty
- Clear out: Remove or eject (from), especially forcibly
- Clear out: Leave quickly
- Clear out: Become empty
- Close down: Stop trading as a business
- Close down: Surround someone, as to impede their movement
- Close in on: Enclose around; to tighten or shrink; to collapse
- Close in on: Catch up with in a chase; to near the end of a pursuit
- Close in on: Near a goal or completion
- Close off: Seal or block the entrance to a road, an area, or a building so that people cannot enter
- Close up: Move people closer together
- Close up: Shut a building or a business for a period of time
- Close up: Heal a cut or other wound
- Clock in: Begin working time, especially by punching in
- Clock in: Be measured at
- Clock off: End work
- Clock out: End work; to officially record a time when one terminates a period of work
- Clock out: Officially record a work-termination time for
- Consist in: Have the thing mentioned as the only or most important part
- Consist of: Be composed or made up of something
- Cool down: Become cooler, to be reduced in temperature
- Cool down: Cause the temperature of an item to decrease
- Cool down: Become less agitated
- Cool down: Cause to become less agitated
- Count down: Announce the passage of time to a precisely timed expected event
- Count down: Await a precisely timed expected event
- Count in: Include (someone) in an activity, etc.
- Count in: Do a countdown before the start of something, especially a musical performance
- Count off: Count (a series of numbers) aloud
- Count on: Rely on, trust, or expect
- Count out: Exclude; to dismiss from participation or eligibility
- Count out: Enumerate items while organizing or transferring them.
- Count up: Add to get a total
- Crop out: Come to light; to be manifest; to appear
- Cross off: Finish; to regard something as complete
- Cross out: Strike out; to draw a line through
- Cross over: Pass from one side or area, physical or abstract, to another
- Cross over: Die
- Cry off: Cancel something that one has previously arranged with someone
- Cry out for: Be in urgent need (of)
- Deal with: Handle verbally or in some form of artistic expression; to address or discuss as a subject
- Deal with: Take action with respect to (someone or something)
- Deal with: Consider, as an example
- Deal with: Come to terms with; to overcome any difficulties presented by
- Deal with: Be in charge of, act on, or dispose of
- Deal with: Behave in a certain way towards
- Do for: Doom; to bring about the demise of
- Do in: Kill or end
- Do in: Exhaust, to tire out
- Do up: Fasten (a piece of clothing, etc.); to tighten
- Do up: Redecorate
- Do up: Execute a task or performance
- Do up: Pack together and envelop; to pack up
- Do without: Manage despite the lack of
- Draw in: Attract
- Draw in: Get someone involved
- Draw in: Approach
- Draw on: Advance, continue; to move or pass slowly or continuously, as under a pulling force.
- Draw on: Approach, come nearer, as evening
- Draw out: Make something last for more time than is necessary
- Draw out: Improve a losing hand to a winning hand by receiving additional cards
- Draw up: Compose a document, especially one having a standard form
- Draw up: Arrange in order or formation
- Draw up: Cause to come to a halt
- Draw up: Come to a halt
- Drink in: Absorb; to be completely attentive to
- Drink to: Raise one’s glass as a toast
- Drink up: Finish one’s drink
- Drive at: Mean, signify; to aim or tend to a point
- Drive away: Depart by driving a vehicle
- Drive away: Force someone or something to leave
- Dry out: Have excess water evaporate or be otherwise removed.
- Dry up: Become dry (often of weather); to lose water
- Dry up: Cause to become dry
- Dry up: Deprive someone of (something vital)
- Dry up: Cease to exist; to disappear
- Dry up: Manually dry dishes
- Dry up: Stop talking, to forget what one was going to say
- Eat away: Erode or corrode gradually
- Eat into: Consume gradually, especially by erosion
- Eat out: Perform cunnilingus or anilingus
- Eat up: Consume completely
- Eat up: Accept or believe entirely, immediately, and without questioning
- Find out: Discover, as by asking or investigating
- Find out: Discover or expose (someone) as disobedient, dishonest, etc.
- Find out: Uncover a weakness (in someone)
- Finish off: Finish completely
- Finish off: Kill
- Finish up: Complete the last details of a task
- Finish with: Put aside, break all relations with, or reject finally
- Finish with: Complete; to complete use of
- Fit in: Be physically capable of going into a space
- Fit in: Be confident in a social situation
- Fit into: Be of the right size and shape to be placed in a location
- Fit into: Be of similar cultural or social status as the members of a group of people
- Fit up: Conspire to incriminate falsely a presumably innocent person
- Fit up: Furnish with suitable things; to prepare; to fit out
- Fix up: Provide (someone) (with something); to furnish
- Fix up: Repair or refurbish
- Fix up: Prepare or provide (something)
- Force out: Cause something to be ejected
- Gear up: Prepare for an activity
- Grow up: Mature and become an adult
- Grow up: Start to develop; to flourish
- Grow up: Stop acting as or like a child
- Hand in: Give something to a responsible person
- Hand off: Pass or transfer
- Hand over: Relinquish control or possession of something to someone
- Hand round: Pass something to everyone in a group
- Hash out: Work through the details of something; especially to work through difficulties
- Head off: Begin moving away
- Head off: Intercept
- Head off: Avoid some usually negative consequence
- Knuckle down: Get to work; to focus on a task
- Lead in: Introduce, to mark the beginning of something, especially in music
- Lead off: Be the first batter of an inning
- Lean on: Put pressure on; to attempt to compel a person to do something; to exert influence on
- Leave behind: Abandon
- Leave behind: Forget about
- Leave behind: Not live longer than; to be survived by
- Leave behind: Leave (a trace of something)
- Leave behind: Outdo; to progress faster than (someone or something else)
- Leave behind: Pass
- Leave off: Desist; to cease
- Leave out: Omit, to not include, to neglect to mention
- Leave out: Allow a portion to remain unused or unconsumed
- Lie around: Do nothing in particular, to be idle
- Lie around: Be in an unknown place
- Lie before: Put oneself at the whim of, to bow down to
- Lie down: Assume a reclining position
- Lie down: Be lazy or remiss
- Lie in: Stay in bed (longer than usual)
- Lie low: Conceal oneself; to remain hidden
- Lift up: Lighten the mood of someone
- Light up: Show an increase in activity or mood
- Light up: Light a cigarette, pipe etc.
- Lighten up: Become less serious and more cheerful or casual; to relax
- Liven up: Improve a person’s mood by making them more energetic
- Liven up: Become more happy, energetic or positive
- Lock in: Fix the value of something potentially variable
- Lock out: Prevent from entering a place, particularly oneself, inadvertently
- Lock out: Prevent from accessing a data structure
- Log in: Gain access to a computer system, usually by providing a previously agreed upon username and password
- Log on: Visit a Web site; construed with to
- Log out: Exit a user account in a computer system
- Luck out: Experience great luck; to be extremely fortunate or lucky
- Luck out: Run out of luck
- Meet up: Meet somebody, by arrangement
- Miss out: Miss an experience or lose an opportunity, etc. that should not be missed
- Mix up: Mix or blend thoroughly and completely
- Mix up: Prepare something from ingredients that are mixed
- Mix up: Confuse or reverse
- Mix up: Combine thoroughly
- Mix up: Become involved with, especially socially or romantically
- Monkey around: Act foolishly
- Narrow down: Make more specific
- Open up: Open
- Open up: Reveal oneself; to become communicative
- Open up: Commence firing weapons
- Pack away: Store away, place out of the way, or stash, especially for the longer term
- Pack away: To eat (a great deal of food)
- Pack off: Send away, with belongings, for a long time
- Pack out: Fill with spectators
- Pack up: Move one’s residence
- Pay back: Pay an amount of money owed to another, to repay
- Pay back: Exact revenge
- Pay for: Exchange for, especially money for goods or services
- Pay for: Be punished or held accountable for
- Pay off: Bribe, especially to deter oversight
- Pay off: Become worthwhile; to produce a net benefit
- Pay off: Pay back; to repay
- Pay off: Pay back (repay, pay off) the entirety of a loan, thereby effecting the release of a lien on
- Phase in: Introduce something little by little
- Phase out: Remove or relinquish the use of something little by little
- Plan on: Expect; to anticipate future actions based on
- Plough back: Reinvest profits into a business
- Plough back: Continue with a task despite it being menial, difficult, or boring
- Plough through: Persevere with an activity of consuming something, both literally and figuratively
- Plough through: Forcefully make a passage to move through
- Point out: Identify among a group of similar subjects
- Point out: Tell, remind, indicate
- Pour out: Serve a drink into a cup or glass
- Pour out: Leave a place quickly, and in large numbers
- Pour out: Talk volubly and deeply. Usually implies telling the truth
- Press out: Obtain from a substance, as by mechanical action
- Quiet down: Become quieter
- Quiet down: Make someone or something become quieter
- Quiet down: Diminish in intensity
- Read in: Accept as input
- Read off: Dictate from a list
- Read out: Read something and say the words to inform other people
- Read out: Read some data and inform the person using the device
- Rely on: Be confident in
- Rely on: Be dependent upon
- Roll around: Move about on the ground while rotating and turning one’s body
- Roll around: Be considered, without much coherence, in someone’s mind
- Roll around: Indulge in sexual intercourse (with)
- Roll around: Return to a prior state
- Roll around: Postpone
- Roll in: Arrive casually at a place
- Roll in: Come in an unstoppable flow
- Roll out: Deploy or release (a new film or software, etc.)
- Roll over: Make a rolling motion or turn
- Roll over: Cause a rolling motion or turn
- Roll over: Give in to
- Roll up: Make something into a particular shape, especially cylindrical or fold-like
- Roll up: Arrive by vehicle, usually by car
- Round out: Make more complete by adding details
- Rule in: Consider (something) as a possible option among others
- Rule out: Make a decision in an official capacity regarding some matter
- Rule out: Reject an option from a list of possibilities
- Rule out: Make something impossible
- Rush off: Produce in great haste
- Scale back: Make a reduction in the amount, extent, etc. of something
- Scare off: Cause (something) to flee by frightening it
- Scare off: Deter
- Scarf down: Eat something quickly
- Sell down: Become less by being sold
- Sell out: Sell all of a product that is in stock
- Sell out: Abandon or betray one’s supporters or principles to seek profit
- Sell out: Betray a person, usually a close friend or family member, for personal gain
- Settle down: Become quiet and calm after a period of disturbance or restlessness
- Settle down: Get comfortable with one’s new accommodation or circumstances
- Settle for: Accept or allow something, especially something not entirely desirable
- Settle in: Get comfortable or established, as in a new place
- Settle on: Make a decision or selection; to decide, arrange, or agree on
- Shake off: Remove (something attached to, on or clinging to an object) by shaking
- Shake off: Dissociate oneself from
- Shake off: Lose someone who is tracking you
- Shake off: Rid oneself of a malady or its symptoms
- Shake up: Agitate by shaking
- Shake up: Upset or distress
- Shake up: Reorganize, to make reforms in
- Shade up: Improve; to correct one’s bad habits or behavior
- Shade up: Take shape; to transform into or become
- Show in: Lead or direct someone to an enclosed space, usually a room
- Show off: Exhibit the best attributes of something
- Show off: Attract attention to for the purpose of bragging or personal exhibitionism
- Show off: Show someone the important parts of something (a building, town etc.)
- Show up: Appear, arrive, or attend, especially suddenly or erratically
- Show up: Make visible or expose faults and deficiencies in, usually by comparison
- Shower with: Give to someone an abundance of (something)
- Shut down: Close, terminate, or end
- Shut down: Turn off or stop
- Shut in: Lock in
- Shut out: Hide from sight
- Shut up: Of a person, to stop talking or (of a person or thing) making noise
- Shut up: I don’t believe it!, no way!
- Sign off: Log off; to stop using a computer, radio, etc., especially to stop talking
- Sign off: Cease broadcasting a radio or television signal, usually at the end of a broadcasting day
- Sign off: Give one’s official approval to something for which it is needed
- Sign out: Sign one’s name as an indication that one is leaving some location
- Sign up: Add a name to the list of people who are participating in something
- Sign up: Add one’s own name to the list of people who are participating in something
- Sign up: Agree to purchase some good or service
- Sing along: Sing some music while someone else is singing
- Sink in: Become clear in one’s mind
- Sit back: Recline while still in a seated position, with one’s back on the frame of the seat
- Sit down: Assume a low or sunken position
- Sit on: Block, suppress, restrain
- Sit on: Restrain (a person)
- Sit on: Take no action on
- Sit on: Be a member of
- Sit out: Decline to participate; particularly, to decline to dance
- Sit through: Unwillingly stay seated until the end of an event
- Sit up: Assume a sitting position from a position lying down
- Sit up: Sit erect
- Sit up: Show sudden interest or surprise
- Sit up: Not go to bed (notionally remaining in a sitting position)
- Skip out: Shirk; to avoid attending or to leave early, especially without permission
- Sleep in: Sleep late; to go on sleeping past one’s customary or planned hour
- Sleep on: Postpone (a decision) at least overnight
- Sleep with: Share a bed or bedroom with
- Slide off: Leave a place, a meeting, etc., without being noticed; to slip away, slip off
- Slow down: Decelerate
- Smoke out: Drive out (something or somebody) using smoke
- Smoke out: Expose (something or somebody)
- Smoke out: Offer to smoke cannabis with someone; to smoke cannabis with someone
- Smoke out: Smoke too much (usually cannabis); to become too stoned
- Smoke out: Run out of tobacco or cannabis; to be emptied of tobacco or cannabis
- Smooth down: Render smooth, to remove roughness from
- Sort out: Clarify by reviewing mentally
- Sort out: Arrange
- Sort out: Fix, as a problem
- Sort out: Organise or separate into groups, as a collection of items, so as to make tidy
- Sort out: Separate from the remainder of a group; often construed with from
- Sort out: Attack physically
- Sort out: Provide (somebody) with a necessity, or a solution to a problem
- Sound off: Hold forth about something in an opinionated manner
- Speed up: Accelerate; to increase speed
- Speed up: Increase the speed of something; to make something go faster
- Spell out: Form (a word) from its component letters
- Spell out: Explain in clear and simple terms
- Split up: Cease to be together, break apart from the group
- Split up: Separate, disassociate, cause to come apart
- Spread out: Become further apart
- Spread out: Place items further apart
- Sump up: Summarize
- Start afresh: Start or restart doing something from the beginning or with a clean sheet
- Start off: Begin
- Start off: Set out on a trip
- Start off: Begin one’s life, or occupation
- Start off: Begin again; to return to the beginning
- Start up: Rise suddenly
- Start up: Begin to operate
- Start up: Begin
- Stay in: Remain at home, to not leave one’s home
- Stay on: Continue in a place or situation, while others leave
- Stay up: Remain in a raised or upright position
- Stay up: Remain awake, to not go to bed
- Stay up: Maintain an erection
- Step back: Stop what one is doing and evaluate the current situation
- Step back: Prevent oneself from becoming emotionally involved in a certain situation
- Step on it: Drive fast; to step on the accelerator
- Step on it: Act quickly
- Step up: Increase speed or rate
- Stick around: Stay; to linger; to remain
- Stick at: Continue practising (a skill), even it is difficult
- Stick down: Cause to stick to a surface
- Stick down: Stick to a surface
- Stick down: Write something casually
- Stick it out: Persist or continue
- Stick out: Pprotrude; to extend beyond
- Stick out: Be prominent, noticeable, or obtrusive
- Stick to: Persist; to continue (to use, do, etc.
- Stick up: Put up by sticking
- Stick up: Rob at gunpoint
- Stick up: Be prominent; to point upwards
- Stick up: Speak or act in defence
- Stick up for: Defend or protect
- Stick with: Follow or adhere to
- Stick with: Follow loyally
- Stick with: Persist in using or employing
- Stick with: Endure in the memory of
- Talk down: Negotiate a lower price
- Talk into: Convince (someone) by talking and suggesting
- Talk out of: Talk to someone in order to dissuade them from doing something
- Talk over: Persuade someone; to talk around
- Talk over: Interrupt the speech of with one’s own speech
- Talk through: Tell someone step by step how to do something
- Talk through: Comfort someone as they endure trauma; to help someone consider an issue or see certain aspects of it
- Think back: Think about a time or experience; to recall
- Think over: Ponder or reflect on a subject
- Think up: Create in one’s mind; to invent
- Tip off: Alert or inform someone, especially confidentially
- Try out: Undergo a test before being selected; to audition
- Used to: Accustomed to, tolerant or accepting of
- Wait for: Wait until the specified event occurs
- Wait for: Await the arrival of
- Wait for: Wait for an event
- Wait for: Wait for a person to do something
- Wait for: Serve someone
- Wait up: Wait
- Wait upon: Wait on; to serve
- Wake up: Awaken somebody
- Wake up: Become more aware of a real-life situation; to concentrate on the matter in hand
- Warm up: Make an audience enthusiastic or animated before a show
- Warm up: Become warmer
- Warm up: Prepare for executing an already-learned activity by a limited amount of additional practice
- Watch out: Be aware or conscious; to look closely or carefully; to use caution
- Watch over: Guard and protect
- Wipe away: Remove or erase with a wiping motion
- Wipe down: Clean the exterior surface of an object, typically by hand using a damp dishcloth or other cleaning cloth
- Wipe up: Dry utensils, dishes etc. that have been washed
- Wipe up: Completely remove spilled liquid or solids, typically by hand using a dishcloth
- Wipe up: Clean thoroughly, particularly with a dishcloth or rag
- Wipe up: Thoroughly defeat an opponent
- Write in: Write a letter to, e.g. a publication
- Write in: Fill in something required, by writing
- Write off: Assign a low value to something
- Write out: Write at full length or in expanded form
- Yield up: Give something against one’s will
- Yield up: Disclose something hidden
Phrasal Verbs List – Topic
Phrasal Verbs about Family
List of common phrasal verbs about Family Life in English:
- Be named after: Be given the name of another person
- Bring sb up: Look after a child until he or she becomes an adult
- Fall out with sb: Argue with sb and you are no longer friendly with them
- Get along/on with: Have a good, friendly relationship with sb
- Get together: Spend time together
- Go by: Prefer to be called by a particular name
- Grow apart: Stop having a close relationship with somebody over a period of time
- Grow up: Develop into an adult
- Look after: Take care of someone
- Look up to: Respect and admire someone
- Take after: Look or behave like an older relative
- Tell off: Criticize someone angrily for doing something wrong
- Settle down: Begin to live a quieter life by getting married
- Split up: End a marriage relationship
- Make up: Become friendly with someone again after an argument
- Break up: End a relationship
- Put up with: Tolerate; accept an unpleasant situation without complaining
- Pass away: To die (to avoid saying ‘die’ when you think this might upset someone)
Phrasal Verbs for Relationships
List of phrasal verbs for Relationships in English:
- Fall for: Begin to be in love with someone
- Go out: Date someone
- Make up: Forgive each other after an argument or disagreement
- Split up: End a relationship
- Break up: End a relationship
- Look up to: Respect and admire someone
- Fall out: Argue with someone and stop being friendly with them
- Put down: Say bad things about someone; to insult
- Put up with: Tolerate; accept an unpleasant situation without complaining
Phrasal Verbs for Travel
List of useful phrasal verbs for Travel in English:
- See off: Go to the airport or station to say goodbye to someone
- Set off: Start a journey
- Get in: Arrive (train, plane)
- Hold up: Delay when travelling
- Take off: When a plane departs or leaves the ground
- Check in: Arrive and register at a hotel or airport
- Get off: Leave a bus, train, plane
- Check out: Leave the hotel after paying
- Get away: To have a holiday or vacation
- Get on: Enter a bus, train, plane, to climb on board
- Drop off: Take someone to a place and leave them there
- Pick up: Let someone get into your car and take them somewhere
- Set out: Start a journey, especially a long journey
- Speed up: Increase speed
- Look around: Explore what is near you, in your area
- Hurry up: Rush and not waste time
- Go back: Go the place someone is leaving from to say goodbye
- Look forward: Look forward to something that is going to happen in the future
- Stop over: Stay somewhere for a short time during a long journey
- Touch down: To land at an airport
Telephones Phrasal Verbs
List of commonly used Telephones phrasal verbs in English:
- Break up: To be inaudible over the mobile phone
- Call back: To return a phone call
- Call up: Call someone on the phone
- Cut off: To interrupt a telephone conversation
- Get through: To contact by telephone
- Hang on: Wait for a short time (informal)
- Hang up: End a telephone call by breaking the connection
- Hold on: Wait for a short time
- Pick up: Answer the phone
- Put through: Connect by phone
- Speak up: Speak louder
- Get back to: Telephone someone later
- Get off: Finish talking on the phone
- Turn off: Disconnect using the power button
- Turn on: Connect using the power button
- Pass on (a message): To communicate (to convey) a message to someone else
- Phone in: Call in by telephone to a central person or central point.
Phrasal Verbs for Cooking
List of useful phrasal verbs for Cooking in English:
- Bake off: Finish baking partly baked food
- Boil away: Cause liquid to evaporate completely by boiling
- Boil down: If a food or liquid boils down it becomes less after it is cooked
- Boil over: Cause liquid to rise and flow over the side of the container
- Bolt down: Eat a large amount of food very quickly
- Chop up: Cut into pieces, usually with several sharp blows
- Cut off: Remove something by cutting it
- Cut out: Shape or form by cutting
- Cut up: Cut something into small pieces
- Fry up: Cook something by frying
- Pick at: Eat only small amounts of a meal
- Pig out: Eat an extremely large amount of food
- Slice off: Cut something from a larger piece
- Whip up: Quickly make a meal or something to eat
- Cook away: Slow cooking; to cook slowly over a long period of time
- Peel off: To remove the skin from a vegetable or fruit
- Thaw out: To warm up from being frozen
- Mix in: To mix or combine with substances
- Warm up: To reheat a food to a desired temperature
Phrasal Verbs for Shopping
List of common phrasal verbs for Shopping in English:
- Bring down: Reduce the amount of something
- Pay for: Give money in order to buy something
- Put on: To see something is worth trying
- Queue up/line up: Wait for something in a line
- Ring up: Record an amount of money by pressing buttons on a cash register
- Sell out: Sell the whole supply/ capacity
- Shop around: Compare prices before buying
- Take off: Remove a piece of clothing
- Try on: Put on a piece of clothing to see if it fits
- Try out: Test something to see if you like it
- Pop into: To visit briefly
- Do up: To fasten something
- Stand out: To be very noticeable
- Pick out: To choose / select
- Wear in: To loosen or soften some new clothing by wearing it
- Set (someone) back: To cost someone a particular amount of money, especially a large amount
- Look out for: To watch or check regularly for something or to search for something
- Go with smt: To seem good, natural, or attractive in combination with something
- Splash out: Spend money freely
Phrasal Verbs for Business
List of frequently used phrasal verbs for Business in English:
- Branch out: Expand or extend one’s interests
- Break into: Enter (with effort or force)
- Carry on: Continue
- Close down: Stop operating
- Look forward to: Feel pleased and excited about something that is going to happen
- Note down: Write something down
- Step down: Resign or leave (a position/job)
- Take off: Become successful or popular very fast
- Take up: Fill a particular amount of space or time
- Weigh up (UK): Consider carefully the advantages or disadvantages of a situation
- Back up: Make a copy of information
- Carry out: Do and complete a task
- Come up: Happen or arise
- Get on (UK): Continue or start doing something
- Keep up with: Follow
- Set up: Start (a business)
- Go through: Experience something difficult or unpleasant
- Find out: Discover a fact or piece of information
- Call off: Cancel something
- Call back: To return a call or telephone someone again.
- Deal with: Handle (a problem)
- Drop in: Make a short visit without making an arrangement in advance
- Fill out: Complete (a form)
- Hold on: Wait
- Join in: Participate
- Lay off: Fire (staff)
- Put back (UK): Delay or postpone
- Run out of: Have no more of something
- Sort out: Organise or fix the contents of something
- Take on: Employ (staff)
- Take over: To begin to have control of or responsibility for something
- Bail out: To rescue somebody from a difficult situation, especially financial problems
- Cut back: To reduce something
- Go under: To become bankrupt
- Fall through: If an agreement, plan, sale etc. falls through, it is not completed successfully
- Pull out: To move away from something or stop being involved in it
- Bottom out: To reaches the lowest level before starting to improve again
- Level off: To stop rising or falling and become steady
Clothes Phrasal Verbs
List of useful clothes phrasal verbs in English:
- Do up: Fasten an item of clothing
- Dress up: Dress (oneself or another) in your best clothes
- Dress up: Put on fancy dress in children’s games
- Dress down: Wear clothes that are more informal than those you usually wear
- Hang out: Dry clothes outside after washing
- Hang up: Put something on a hook or a hanger
- Have on: Wear an item of clothing on one’s person
- Kick off: Make your shoes come off by shaking your feet
- Put on: Dress yourself or someone else with an item or items of clothing
- Slip on: Put on an item of clothing easily
- Take off: Remove any item of clothing
- Take in: Make clothing narrower
- Take up: Reduce the length of a piece of clothing
- Try on: Put on an item of clothing to find out whether it fits or is suitable
- Throw on: Put on a piece of clothing quickly and carelessly
- Turn up: Shorten trousers, a dress or a skirt so that they fit better
- Wrap up: Put warm clothes on
- Zip up: To be closed by means of a zip
- Let out: Make clothing wider
- Let down: Use the extra cloth in the hem of a piece of clothing to make it longer
Animals Phrasal Verbs
List of essential animals phrasal verbs in English:
- Chicken out: Not do something because you’re afraid
- Duck out: Leave quickly and unannounced
- Fish for: Ask for or try to get something in an indirect way
- Fish out: Pull something out of a place
- Horse around: Play in a loud/rough way
- Pig out: Eat a lot of food at once
- Wolf down: Eat very quickly
- Monkey around: To do things in an unserious way; to play or waste time
- Beaver away: Work hard doing something
- Ferret out: Discover information by searching for it in a determined way
- Worm out of: Draw or manipulate information out of someone
- Rat on: Inform on (someone) to a person in a position of authority
- Rabbit on (UK): Continue talking about something that is not interesting to the person you are talking to
- Monkey with: Bother or interfere with someone or something
- Turn turtle: Turn upside down; to flip over
- Squirrel away: Stash, hide or hoard something for future use
- Drone on: Talk for a long time in a boring way
- Clam up: Become silent; to stop talking, to shut up
- Ferret around: Search for something by sorting through materials
- Lark about/around (UK): Behave in a silly way because you think it is funny
- Leech off: Use someone, or cling to s.o for personal gain, often not giving anything in return
Phrasal Verbs Around the House
List of common phrasal verbs around the house in English:
- Take out of the trash: Remove trash from the house
- Throw away: Put something into the trash can/to discard
- Pick up: Remove something from the floor to put into their proper place
- Hang up: Put your clothes on a hanger to hang in the closet
- Put away: Put items into their proper place (a drawer, cabinet, etc…)
- Clean up/ tidy up: Remove the dirt, stains & unwanted material
- Mop up: Use a mop (towel or sponge) to remove liquid from the floor.
- Build on: Construct an additional part of to the house, to add more space/rooms/etc…
- Turn on: Give (lamp/TV) power, to start
- Put up: Attach (a picture, or other objec) to the wall to hang
- Turn off: Cause the power of (lamp/tv) to stop
- Take down: Remove (a picture or object) from the wall
- Stock up: Buy a lot of something (food, drink, etc) to fill the refrigerator or pantry.
- Put on: Get dressed
- Put on (music): Turn on the radio or some music
- Put on: Put (the pot/kettle/etc…) on the stove
- Put out: Extinguish/ to make a fire stop working
Phrasal Verbs for Party
List of phrasal verbs for Party in English:
- Blow up: Fill something with air or gas
- Turn up: Increase the amount of sound, heat, or light of a machine
- Blow out: Use your breath to make a flame stop burning
- Pull off: Succeed in doing something that is difficult
- Go out: Leave home and go somewhere, especially to do something enjoyable
- Dress up: Put on formal clothes for a special occasion
- Hang out: Spend time relaxing, usually with friends
- Pick up: Meet someone at their home to go somewhere, often in a car
- Eat out: Eat in a restaurant
Phrasal Verbs for Driving
List of phrasal verbs for Driving in English:
- Back up: Make a car go backwards
- Buckle up: Fasten your seat belt in a car, plane etc.
- Cut off: Block someone’s way
- Drive by: Do something out of a car
- Fill up: Put gasoline in the car until it’s completely full
- Get out of: Leave
- Pull over: Stop on the side of the road
- Run over: Hit something/someone with a car and drive over them
- Slow down: To decrease speed; to go slower
- Turn off: Stop a piece of equipment working temporarily by pressing a button
- Pull in: Move to the side of the road
- Pull out: Move away from the side of the road, etc.
- Run into: Crash into somebody/something
- Knock down: Hit somebody and make them fall to the ground
- Pick up: Take someone in vehicle
Phrasal Verbs for Education
List of useful phrasal verbs for Education in English:
- Be into: Be interested in sth in active way
- Take up: Start doing a new activity
- Fall behind: Make less progress than other people
- Catch up: Improve and reach the same standard as other people
- Go over: Check something carefully
- Go over: Practise and repeat something in order to learn it
- Read up on: Study something by reading a lot about it
- Hand in/turn in: Give your finished work to a teacher
- Hand out: give things to the members of a group
- Copy out: Write sth again exactly as it was written
- Drop out: Leave school without finishing your studies
Phrasal Verbs for Work
List of common phrasal verbs for Work in English:
- Burn out: Be extremely tired
- Call off: Cancel
- Carry out: Do a particular piece of work, research etc
- Draw up: Prepare something in writing, especially an offical document
- Fill in for: To do somebody’s job for a short time while they are not there
- Hand in: Give something to a person in authority
- Knock off: Stop working
- Knuckle down: Start working harder
- Lay off: Stop employing someone because there is not enough work for them to do
- Run by: Tell someone about an idea or plan so that they can give you their opinion
- Slack off: Do something with less energy and effort than is usual or ncessary
- Take on: Employ someone
- Take over: Take control of something
- Work out: To develop in a successful way
Phrasal Verbs for Health
List of phrasal verbs for Health in English:
- Get over: Recover from something
- Pass away: Die
- Run over: Hit by a vehicle
- Break out: Develop skin sores or irritation
- Fight off: Resist an illness
- Come to: Become conscious
- Pass out: Faint, lose consciousness
- Come down with: Become sick (not seriously)
- Throw up: Be sick, vomit
- Work out: Train the body by physical exercise
- Warm up: Begin a physical activity gradually
- Block up: Stop something from moving through something else
- Lay (laid) up: Unable to work, etc. because of an illness or injury
- Swell up: Become large, inflated, or bulging
- Clog up: Become or cause to become obstructed
- Dose up (UK): Give medicine to
- Lay low: Render someone unable to move or leave their bed
- Let up: Become less strong or stop
- Come round: Become conscious
- Shake off: Shake something in order to get something off of it
Phrasal Verbs for Idea and Innovation
List of phrasal verbs for Idea and Innovation in English:
- Think up: Invent or to imagine something; to produce a new idea
- Come up with: Think of or suggest an idea, plan, or solution
- Start over: Begin again
- Figure out: Think about somebody/something until you understand them/it
Phrasal Verbs for Money
List of phrasal verbs for Money in English:
- Pay off: Finish paying money owed for something
- Fork out: Spend a lot of money on something, especially unwillingly
- Run up: Create lots of debt
- Rip off: Charge too much
- Save up: Not spend money
- Put aside: Save an amount of money
- Squirrel away: Put something away in a secret place, especially money
- Pay back: Give someone the same amount of money that you borrowed from them
- Splash out: buy something expensive
- Put down: Pay part of the cost of something
- Come into: To be left money by somebody who has died
Phrasal Verbs for Sleep
List of phrasal verbs for Sleep in English:
- Wake up: Stop sleeping
- Get up: Stop sleeping and leave bed
- Lie down: Rest on your back
- Sleep in: Sleep longer than wanted
- Drop off: Fall asleep easily, without intending to
- Sleep over: Sleep at a friend’s house
- Lie in: Stay in bed after the time you usually get up
- Stay up: Go to bed later than usual
- Go off: Ring
- Sleep through: sleep continuously for a long time
- Sleep on it: Delay making a decision until the following day
- Doze off: Go to sleep especially when you did not intend to
Phrasal Verbs for Problems
List of phrasal verbs for Problems in English:
- Talk over: Discuss a problem with someone before deciding what to do
- Wrestle with: Try to understand or find a solution to a difficult problem
- Run up against: Deal with unexpected problems or a difficult opponent
- Think through: Think carefully about the possible results of something
- Sort out: Solve a problem or situation
- Knuckle down: Begin to work hard at something
- Run into problems: Start to experience difficulties
- Deal with: Take the necessary action, especially in order to solve a problem
Phrasal Verbs about Crime
List of common phrasal verbs for Crime in English:
- Break into: Enter a building or car by using force, in order to steal something
- Break out of: Escape from a prison
- Tip off: Warn somebody about something that is going to happen, especially something illegal
- Stake out: Watch a place secretly, especially for signs of illegal activity
- Bring in: Bring somebody to a police station in order to ask them questions or arrest them
- Lock up: Put someone in prison
Phrasal Verbs for Environment
List of useful phrasal verbs for Environment in English:
- Wipe out: Destroy something completely
- Break down: Decompose, when something slowly reduces to its smallest parts
- Scale back: Make something smaller in size, amount, etc. than it used to be
- Used up: Exhaust of strength or useful properties
- Throw away: Get rid of something that you no longer want or need
- Run out of: Finish the supply of something
- Die out: Stop existing
- Spread out: Cover a large area
- Rely on: Need or depend on somebody/something
- Cut down: Kill trees
Learn English Phrasal Verbs with Pictures
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