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What you call a "phrasal verb with a preposition" doesn't seem correct.
A verb-plus-preposition structure like expand on is usually called a prepositional verb.
Only a verb-plus-adverb structure like catch on is usually called a phrasal
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I'm trying to think of a prepositional verb that can be split by an object.
1.Call on (visit)
2.Call up (summon)
1. *I called my friends on.
2. I called my friends up.
#2 is a phrasal verb.
Also, I don't beleive that a
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First, allow me to redefine for clarity, Hanuman:
Multi-word verbs (verb + particle) are divided into (1) phrasal verbs (verb+adverb) and (2) prepositional verbs (verb + preposition).
In both, the particle can be followed by a noun, so you
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I guess if you don't know the verb at all, you're stuck, Lana. There are no prescriptive rules, only guidelines. Greenbaum & Quirk list five differences:
(1) The particle of a prepositional verb must precede the object, but the particle of a
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I was going to open a new thread about phrasal verbs but then I saw this one and I thought that I could post my question here. I hope you'll be able to answer my question as well, here it is:
How can you tell the difference between phrasal and
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Maj,
"turn down" is a phrasal verb. some of its characteristics are different from those of "prepositional verbs".
In phrasal verbs, the object -when it is a pronoun- will usually appear between the verb and the adverbial particle.
I have to
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