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?
2 nov. 2017 03:49
Antwoorden · 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).
2 november 2017
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.
2 november 2017
usually, however the days of guessing are over, try google translate
2 november 2017
Thank you. But i don't have any troubles with a phrasal verb.This post is just my interest.
2 november 2017
Hi Naoki, could you give examples of phrasal verbs whose meanings you have trouble understanding?
2 november 2017
Heb je je antwoorden nog steeds niet gevonden?
Schrijf je vragen op en laat de moedertaalsprekers je helpen!