Unit 14. International organizations

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Người gửi: Nguyễn Ngọc Sơn
Ngày gửi: 07h:59' 17-04-2020
Dung lượng: 59.2 KB
Số lượt tải: 325
Nguồn:
Người gửi: Nguyễn Ngọc Sơn
Ngày gửi: 07h:59' 17-04-2020
Dung lượng: 59.2 KB
Số lượt tải: 325
Số lượt thích:
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PHRASAL VERBS
A phrasal verb is a verb that is made up of a main verb and a particle. The particle often changes the meaning of the main verb.
EX: I called Jen to see how she was.
(call = to telephone)
They`ve called off the meeting.
(call off = to cancel)
There are two main types of phrasal verb:
separable and inseparable.
Separable: With separable phrasal verbs, the verb and particle can be apart or together.
When the object is a personal pronoun, it must be put between the verb and the particle:
She gave it back. (NOT She gave back it.)
He knocked it over. (NOT He knocked over it.)
We will be leaving them behind. (NOT We will be leaving behind them.)
Inseparable:
She takes after her mother.
(= She looks like her mother or she behaves like her mother.)
I know I can count on you.
(= I know I can trust you or I know I can believe you.)
I came across your email when I was clearing my inbox.
(come across = to find something by chance)
The caterpillar turned into a beautiful butterfly.
(turn into = become)
It was quite a major operation. It took months to get over it and feel normal again.
(get over = recover from something)
We are aware of the problem and we are looking into it.
(look into = investigate)
Dear teachers,
Is there a simple way to differentiate separable and non separable phrasal verbs?
Can I say both "see me off" and "see off me"
(Peter Mreplied on 14 February, 2020 - 07:37 Poland)
Hello Habijak,
I`m afraid there is no simple way to tell these apart just from their appearance. You need to memorise which are which, unfortunately.
See off is a separable phrasal verb. The object can come before the particle or after it:
He saw his wife off at the airport.
He saw off his wife at the airport.
However, if the object is a pronoun, it must come before the particle:
He saw her off at the airport.
Not - He saw off her at the airport.
Phrasal verbs with two particles_also called three-part verbs_ are inseparable. Even if you use an object pronoun, you put it after the particles.
A few three-part verbs have the pattern:
talk sb out of sth / doing sth: thuyết phục ai đừng làm gì
put sth down to sth: đổ cho, đổ tại, quy cho, gán cho
A phrasal verb is a verb that is made up of a main verb and a particle. The particle often changes the meaning of the main verb.
EX: I called Jen to see how she was.
(call = to telephone)
They`ve called off the meeting.
(call off = to cancel)
There are two main types of phrasal verb:
separable and inseparable.
Separable: With separable phrasal verbs, the verb and particle can be apart or together.
When the object is a personal pronoun, it must be put between the verb and the particle:
She gave it back. (NOT She gave back it.)
He knocked it over. (NOT He knocked over it.)
We will be leaving them behind. (NOT We will be leaving behind them.)
Inseparable:
She takes after her mother.
(= She looks like her mother or she behaves like her mother.)
I know I can count on you.
(= I know I can trust you or I know I can believe you.)
I came across your email when I was clearing my inbox.
(come across = to find something by chance)
The caterpillar turned into a beautiful butterfly.
(turn into = become)
It was quite a major operation. It took months to get over it and feel normal again.
(get over = recover from something)
We are aware of the problem and we are looking into it.
(look into = investigate)
Dear teachers,
Is there a simple way to differentiate separable and non separable phrasal verbs?
Can I say both "see me off" and "see off me"
(Peter Mreplied on 14 February, 2020 - 07:37 Poland)
Hello Habijak,
I`m afraid there is no simple way to tell these apart just from their appearance. You need to memorise which are which, unfortunately.
See off is a separable phrasal verb. The object can come before the particle or after it:
He saw his wife off at the airport.
He saw off his wife at the airport.
However, if the object is a pronoun, it must come before the particle:
He saw her off at the airport.
Not - He saw off her at the airport.
Phrasal verbs with two particles_also called three-part verbs_ are inseparable. Even if you use an object pronoun, you put it after the particles.
A few three-part verbs have the pattern:
talk sb out of sth / doing sth: thuyết phục ai đừng làm gì
put sth down to sth: đổ cho, đổ tại, quy cho, gán cho
 








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