Search from various angielski teachers...
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 kwi 2010 00:06
Odpowiedzi · 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 kwietnia 2010
Nadal nie znalazłeś/łaś odpowiedzi?
Napisz swoje pytania i pozwól, aby rodzimi użytkownicy języka ci pomogli!
alucky
Znajomość języków
angielski, japoński
Język do nauczenia się
angielski
Artykuły, które również mogą ci się spodobać

Same Word, Different Meaning: American, British, and South African English
22 głosy poparcia · 17 Komentarze

How to Sound Confident in English (Even When You’re Nervous)
17 głosy poparcia · 12 Komentarze

Marketing Vocabulary and Phrases for Business English Learners
14 głosy poparcia · 6 Komentarze
Więcej artykułów
