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Imran khan
What does it mean (up to & up for )
Please tell me with lots of example thank you
12 de jul. de 2017 11:04
Respuestas · 2
I agree completely with Joe. You can also have:
- I'm not up to it or up to the job (I'm not good enough or I'm not ready)
- He's up for elimination (in a reality tv show, when someone is going to be voted off)
There are so many uses for these phrasal verbs, my recommendation is when you read a book or watch a ted talk and highlight every time it's used, write it in your notebook and think about what it might mean in that context. Or book yourself in for a general lesson with a great teacher and you'll cover phrasal verbs as part of the syllabus.
I hope this info helps!
- Katherine
12 de julio de 2017
Both are very casual expressions. "Up to" refers to something that a person is doing, whereas "up for" refers to something a person wants or would be willing to do.
"What are you up to?" = casual / (normally friendly) way to say, "What are you doing?"
"They're up to no good." = "They're doing something bad / against the law."
"Are you up for ice cream?" = "Do you want to eat ice cream?"
"He's up for anything." = "He's willing / open to do anything."
12 de julio de 2017
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Imran khan
Competencias lingüísticas
Inglés, Hindi
Idioma de aprendizaje
Inglés
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