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A-Phrasal verbs with and without objects Some phrasal verbs take an object (transitive); others do not take an object (intransitive).
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Some verbs can be used both with and without an object, but the meaning may change. Use the context to decide if the verb has a different meaning from the one you are familiar with. -Polly and Beth were so clever the teacher moved them up to a higher class. (with object) -Polly and Beth moved up to a higher class. (no object = same meaning) -I can drop you off at the station. (with object = drive you somewhere and leave you there) -I was sitting in the armchair and I dropped off. (no object = fell asleep, different meaning) Some verbs must have two objects, one after the verb and one after the particle. -I always associate that song with our holiday in Jamaica. -Playing tennis for three hours every evening after school deprived her of her youth. B-Position of the object In many cases, the particle may come before or after the object. -The teacher marked the student down / marked down the student because her bibliography wasn’t up to standard. Very long objects usually come after the particle. -The accident cut off domestic and industrial water and electricity supplies. When the object is a personal pronoun, the pronoun always comes before the particle.
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Some verbs (sometimes called prepositional verbs) must have the object after the particle, even if it is a pronoun. A good dictionary will tell you if this is so. -We’ve had to contend with a lot of problems lately. (Not: contend a lot of problems with) [deal with a difficult or unpleasant situation] You probably already know some of these verbs (look for, look after, cope with).
C-Three-part verbs Some phrasal verbs have three parts – the verb and two particles. The object comes last. -I will not put up with such bad behaviour. [tolerate] Other examples include look forward to, look down on, get on with, catch up on [do something you did not have time to do earlier], face up to [accept that a difficult or unpleasant situation exists].
-English Phrasal Verbs in Use Advanced
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