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Is there a difference between 'save up' and 'save' as in "you may need to save up/save some money first - any one of these unforgettable experiences will cost you upward of US$6,000". Thanks
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Hi, I´d like to know if in this sentence the phrasal verbs are rightly used, I´m learning: I wanted to tag alomg with my mother but she has given up on my promises and she booted me up.
Ok, thanks in advance
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"reckon with" is a phrasal verb. See this from Answers.com. reckon with 1. To take into account or deal with: a man to be reckoned with.
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what are the phrasal verbs synymous to 'achieve' ?
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Is that correct, or does 'up' become its own Prepositional Phrase within the Verb phrase? It may depend on the details of the system of analysis you are following. I'm inclined to go with Radford and have 'up' become a PP in
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I look at the whole question in a rather simplistic way. look up is, as you say, a phrasal verb (I call them 2-word verbs). The fact that the object pronoun comes between the two parts makes no difference. It is still a phrasal verb with no
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Hi there, I would like to know how to analyze the following sentence with the phrasal verb 'look up' 'The boy looked it (i.e. the word) up in the dictionary' NP: The boy VP: ? looked (V) - it (NP) - up (Preposition) - in the
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Please ignore my first question. I was wrong about my conjecture. The verb is "smack." Just now, I found that "smack of something" is a phrasal verb. But still, please shed some light on the second question. Regards,
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It seems you model the abilities and needs of all ESL students on yourself. That's what you are doing too, except it's never clear what the foudation of your reasoning is, and often also what the actual reasoning is. It seems successful
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Those fors of phrasal verbs I presented as examples are defined as 'to get' in this dictionary: http://dictionary.cambridge.org/define.asp?key=30332&dict=CALD or as 'used to indicate the object of a desire, intention, or
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