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Victoria
šŸ”¹Can I always use the phrasal verb ā€œgo overā€ implying the meaning ā€œexamineā€ 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. šŸ”¹Does ā€œoverā€ mean ā€œbecause ofā€ in this example? They argued over nothing.
8 sept. 2020 16:46
Réponses · 8
1
Also ā€œoverā€ in your last example refers to the subject in which they were arguing.
8 septembre 2020
1
ā€œGo overā€ does not always mean ā€œexamineā€, which suggests looking at something carefully. I’ll go over the basics of the contract. (Just the main points. I won’t 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 ā€œexamineā€ you might say ā€œwent 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. You’ve got it right. To ā€œgo 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
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