搜尋自 英語 {1} 教師……
Mia
Hi, what's the difference between "fall over", "trip over" and "slip over"?
2022年2月16日 16:32
解答 · 5
1
Sara,
to trip is the act of catching your foot on an object which causes you to stumble; perhaps a carpet or a cat.
to slip is an act of losing friction with a surface; think banana skin or ice.
to fall is the act of moving towards the centre of a mass as when under the influence of gravity; think, off something.
Providing context 'flavours' each of these situations.
2022年2月16日
1
Hi Sara, 
The meanings of 'fall over' and 'trip over' are about the same. The difference is grammatical. We can say 'I fell over' as a standalone phrasal verb. But 'trip over' isn't a phrasal verb... so if I say 'I tripped over', because I've included the preposition 'over', I need to include its object (the object of the preposition).
So, someone falls:
I don't know what happened; he fell over! 
I don't know what happened; he fell over the edge of the cliff!
He tripped. 
He tripped over that rock.
NOT: He tripped over the edge of the cliff (here you can see 'over' acting as a preposition and not as the particle in a phrasal verb... and you can't really trip over the edge of a cliff, which is why this sentence doesn't work).
AND NOT: He tripped over.
'Slip' is different and is usually used with 'on', as in 'He slipped on the ice'. 
I hope this helps!
2022年2月16日
還沒找到你要的答案嗎? 
寫下你的問題,讓母語者來幫助你!
Mia
語言能力
英語, 波斯語 (Farsi), 西班牙語
學習語言
英語, 波斯語 (Farsi)
你也許會喜歡的文章

🎃 October Traditions: Halloween, Holidays, and Learning Portuguese
21 讚  ·  7 留言

The Curious World of Silent Letters in English
22 讚  ·  11 留言

5 Polite Ways to Say “No” at Work
28 讚  ·  7 留言
更多文章