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What is the difference between "work out" and "working out" and how I can use it correctly
Nov 14, 2022 5:47 PM
Answers · 3
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So in one way it can mean exercise, often at the gym, designed to 'get fit'.
We can use 'work out' in a noun form, 'workout' and therefore use it like this:
"I went for a workout before dinner".
As a verb, it depends what tense or with what other verbs you are using it. Here are a few examples:
"I like working out". "I like to work out". "I was working out at the gym when the phone rang". I work out every night before my dinner".
Other meanings include:
Solve a problem - "I worked out a difficult maths problem today"
Try to understand something/someone better - "I couldn't work out Tom earlier, he was in such a strange mood and I couldn't tell if he was happy or sad"
When something goes well - "My job didn't work out so I quit".
November 14, 2022
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November 14, 2022
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Language Skills
Arabic, English, Other, Spanish
Learning Language
English, Spanish
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