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Naoki
Phrasal verb that you don't know
As a native English speaker, when you see or hear a phrasal verb you don't know, how do you guess the meaning? Can you understand the meaning from the clue of the context?
2017년 11월 2일 오전 3:49
답변 · 8
This is a good question. I looked up some phrasal verbs to see if there were any I didn't know (there had to be!) an lo and behold, I found some.
A few examples: argue down, argue out, bail up, beaver away, and big up.
Without the context these were nearly impossible to guess. However something I do is take the meaning of the individual words and pair them together to create meaning. I would guess 'argue down' means to beat someone at an argument because you're a) arguing and b) going down on them, and that implies giving them a good thrashing, so I'd assume that you're winning. Turns out I'm right. 'Beaver away' is easy to guess because you just have to think what a beaver does traditionally - work hard. And that's exactly what the phrase means. Not all phrasal verbs are like this though, especially ones that have their origins outside America (at least from my experience).
2017년 11월 2일
Yes, guessing the meaning from context is what we normally do. We might compare the phrasal verb to other phrasal verbs to guess at its meaning as well.
2017년 11월 2일
usually, however the days of guessing are over, try google translate
2017년 11월 2일
Thank you. But i don't have any troubles with a phrasal verb.This post is just my interest.
2017년 11월 2일
Hi Naoki, could you give examples of phrasal verbs whose meanings you have trouble understanding?
2017년 11월 2일
아직도 답을 찾지 못하셨나요?
질문을 남겨보세요. 원어민이 도움을 줄 수 있을 거예요!
Naoki
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