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Phrasal Verbs!!! Check it out
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What is a Phrasal Verb? A phrasal verb has two parts: a main verb and a particle. Verb + Particle = Phrasal Verb Particles and prepositions look the same, but they act differently. Particles often change the meaning of the main verb. Example: He looked up (verb and preposition) at the ceiling. This is not a phrasal verb!! Example: He looked up (verb + participle) the word in the dictionary. Phrasal Verb!!
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Transitive or Intransitive?
Transitive phrasal verbs are followed by a direct object. (This means, they need an object to follow them. They cannot stand alone.) Example: He set up the restaurant on a busy street. Intransitive phrasal verbs do not take a direct object. Example: He gets up at 6:00am every morning. Direct object
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Transitive Phrasal Verbs
Many transitive phrasal verbs are separable (They can go after the particle or between the verb and the particle.) Example 1: He set up the restaurant on a busy street. Example 2: He set the restaurant up on a busy street. **Note: If the direct object is a pronoun, it has to go between the verb and the particle. Example: He set it up on a busy street. NOT!! He set up it on a busy street.
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Transitive Phrasal Verbs
Separable transitive phrasal verb structure Verb + particle + object (noun) He figured out the problem. Verb + object + particle He figured the problem out. Verb + object (pronoun) + participle He figured it out. **NOTE: Other transitive verbs are inseparable (The direct object always comes after the particle). Example: The café is having difficulty keeping up with demand. NOT!!! The café is having difficulty keeping the demand up with.
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How do I know… …if a phrasal verb is transitive or intransitive? Practice!! …if a transitive phrasal verb is separable or inseparable?
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