alucky
rob A of B / rid A of B   other phrases ? Good day! -rob A of B -rid A of B    These phrases get me confused in use because I tend to associate "rob A of B" with steal A from B though I could understand the difference thanks to English teachers' help here on Q&A . By the way Are there other phrasal verbs with the distributing meaning "of" !? Regards
10 apr. 2010 00:06
Antwoorden · 1
Hi alucky, A general question about phrasal verbs is a huge question, so I'm not surprised people are daunted by it. The thing is, in your examples B begins by being connected to A: eg. rob John(A) of his money(B). The "of" indicates "from" so there's always a meaning of taking B away from A in some way. In all cases, B is always the smaller removable part, and A stays as the focus. A is the possessor so you use "of". If your focus is on the smaller B, then you'd use a different verb, plus "from": eg. "liberate (or take, steal) the money from John". Sorry not to provide a list - I also had a look, and searching for more examples was difficult because there are 2 elements in your examples and most phrasal verbs handle only one.
10 april 2010
Heb je je antwoorden nog steeds niet gevonden?
Schrijf je vragen op en laat de moedertaalsprekers je helpen!