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Luiz
"Lean across" and "lean over"
Do they have the same meaning?
For example:
1. "My paper just fell on the floor! I leaned over and picked it up!"
2. "She leaned across me so she could reach the phone!"
3. "The floor got so stained with grease that I had to lean over and scrub it off!
I'm not that sure if these sentences are correct! Could you guys explain the difference to me and also give me some more examples by using these two phrasal verbs?
Thanks in advance.
Feb 2, 2018 3:03 PM
Answers · 3
1
Hi Luiz,
They don't mean the same thing. When a person "leans over", it usually means to bend at the waist or hips so that you can reach something, like in your two examples: "My paper just fell on the floor! I leaned over and picked it up!" and "The floor got so stained with grease that I had to lean over and scrub it off!"
"Lean across" means you bend at the waist or hips AND cross something (or someone) and possibly touch it. So this example: "She leaned across me so she could reach the phone!" means that she leaned and crossed my body and, possibly, touched me while doing so.
A few more examples:
"Simon pushed the chair, which leaned over and then fell." ("Lean over" can also apply to objects)
"John leaned across the table to reach the glass on the other side." --> John crossed the table by leaning.
February 2, 2018
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Luiz
Language Skills
English, Portuguese
Learning Language
English
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