Wählen Sie aus verschiedenen Englisch Lehrkräften für ...
Mia
Hi, what's the difference between "fall over", "trip over" and "slip over"?
16. Feb. 2022 16:32
Antworten · 5
1
Sara,
to trip is the act of catching your foot on an object which causes you to stumble; perhaps a carpet or a cat.
to slip is an act of losing friction with a surface; think banana skin or ice.
to fall is the act of moving towards the centre of a mass as when under the influence of gravity; think, off something.
Providing context 'flavours' each of these situations.
16. Februar 2022
1
Hi Sara,
The meanings of 'fall over' and 'trip over' are about the same. The difference is grammatical. We can say 'I fell over' as a standalone phrasal verb. But 'trip over' isn't a phrasal verb... so if I say 'I tripped over', because I've included the preposition 'over', I need to include its object (the object of the preposition).
So, someone falls:
I don't know what happened; he fell over!
I don't know what happened; he fell over the edge of the cliff!
He tripped.
He tripped over that rock.
NOT: He tripped over the edge of the cliff (here you can see 'over' acting as a preposition and not as the particle in a phrasal verb... and you can't really trip over the edge of a cliff, which is why this sentence doesn't work).
AND NOT: He tripped over.
'Slip' is different and is usually used with 'on', as in 'He slipped on the ice'.
I hope this helps!
16. Februar 2022
Haben Sie noch keine Antworten gefunden?
Geben Sie Ihre Fragen ein und lassen Sie sich von Muttersprachlern helfen!
Mia
Sprachfähigkeiten
Englisch, Persisch (Farsi), Spanisch
Lernsprache
Englisch, Persisch (Farsi)
Artikel, die Ihnen gefallen könnten

Same Word, Different Meaning: American, British, and South African English
11 positive Bewertungen · 8 Kommentare

How to Sound Confident in English (Even When You’re Nervous)
13 positive Bewertungen · 11 Kommentare

Marketing Vocabulary and Phrases for Business English Learners
10 positive Bewertungen · 4 Kommentare
Weitere Artikel