Recherche parmi diffĆ©rents professeurs en Anglaisā¦
Victoria
š¹Can I always use the phrasal verb āgo overā implying the meaning āexamineā in such examples as:
1. I briefly go over the details of my new lesson.
2. He went over a new scientific article.
3. A child is going over mathematics rules.
4. My daughter went over the instruction.
š¹Does āoverā mean ābecause ofā in this example?
They argued over nothing.
8 sept. 2020 16:46
Réponses · 8
1
Also āoverā in your last example refers to the subject in which they were arguing.
8 septembre 2020
1
āGo overā does not always mean āexamineā, which suggests looking at something carefully.
Iāll go over the basics of the contract. (Just the main points. I wonāt examine the details.)
Teachers love to go over idioms that native speakers rarely use. (They cover them. They include them.)
I went over the vocabulary words again. (I reviewed them)
To convey āexamineā you might say āwent over in detailā. They went over the evidence in great detail in order to solve the crime.
8 septembre 2020
1
Yes and yes.
We also usually say "to fight over." As in, "The kids are always fighting over the TV remote."
8 septembre 2020
1
Yes. Youāve got it right. To āgo over somethingā can me used in the sense of examining or to briefly skim over a paragraph or in other contexts. Great job.
8 septembre 2020
Vous n'avez pas encore trouvé vos réponses ?
Ćcrivez vos questions et profitez de l'aide des locuteurs natifsĀ !
Victoria
CompƩtences linguistiques
Anglais, Allemand, Polonais, Russe, Turc
Langue ƩtudiƩe
Anglais, Allemand, Polonais, Turc
Articles qui pourraient te plaire

English Vocabulary for Using Microsoft Office at Work
25 j'aime Ā· 3 Commentaires

How to Answer āHow Was Your Weekend?ā Naturally in English
56 j'aime Ā· 29 Commentaires

Why Some Jokes Donāt Translate: Understanding Humor in English
15 j'aime Ā· 6 Commentaires
Plus d'articles
