الموضوع: درس قواعد
عرض مشاركة واحدة
قديم 07/10/2009   #19
شب و شيخ الشباب التقرير الجوال
عضو
-- زعيـــــــم --
 
الصورة الرمزية لـ التقرير الجوال
التقرير الجوال is offline
 
نورنا ب:
Nov 2007
المطرح:
U.S.A
مشاركات:
1,282

إرسال خطاب Yahoo إلى التقرير الجوال
افتراضي الدرس الأول .. Phrasel verb's .. أو الأفعال المركبة.





Phrasal verbs

WHAT IS A PHRASAL VERB

A phrasal verb is a verb which consists of more than one word. Most phrasal verbs consist of two words: the first word is a verb, the second word is a preposition or an adverb. Examples of common phrasal verbs are get up, put off, turn on, object to, and apply for. There are also some threeword phrasal verbs, such as look forward to and get away with



You can sometimes guess the meaning of a phrasal verb from the meaning of the words it contains, for example come in = come + in. More often, the meaning of the phrasal verb is different often very different from the meaning of the verb which forms its first part



For example put off (="arrange" to do something at a later time) has a very different meaning from put (="put" something somewhere), and look forward to (="when" you feel happy because something is going to happen soon) has a very different meaning from look ="look" at something)



Like singleword verbs, some phrasal verbs are ‘transitive’ (they must have an object), and some phrasal verbs are ‘intransitive’ (they do not have an object). For example



take off [phrasal verb, Transitive] ="remove" your shirt, coat etc

She took off her coat and sat down

get up [phrasal verb, Intransitive] =leave" your bed in the morning
I usually get up very early


Some phrasal verbs can be transitive or intransitive. For example


join in [phrasal verb, Intransitive/Transitive] ="start" taking part in something that other people are already doing, for example a game or song

We all joined in the game

I want you all to join in


WHERE DO YOU PUT THE OBJECT

With transitive phrasal verbs, you have to decide where to put the object



• If the phrasal verb ends with a preposition, the preposition must come after the verb, and you cannot split up the phrasal verb. For example



apply for sth ="ask" to be considered for a job

I’ve applied for a job at the university

object to sth ="say" that you do not agree with something

Local people are objecting to the plan



• If the phrasal verb ends with an adverb, there are three possibilities



1. If you choose a noun phrase as the object, you can put it either before or after the adverb. For example



call off ="decide" that a meeting, party, strike etc should not happen

They’ve called off the strike. OR They’ve called the strike off

turn on="make" a light, television, radio etc start working

Will you turn on the light? OR Will you turn the light on



2. If you choose a pronoun (him, her, it, them etc) as the object, you have to put it before the adverb. For example



turn down="make" a television, radio etc less loud

Can you turn it down? NOT Can you turn down it



3. If the object is a long phrase, you usually put it at the end after the phrasal verb. For example



They’ve called off the strike that was planned for next week

Can you turn down the television in the front room



Flush it down the Loo
  رد مع اقتباس
 
Page generated in 0.02960 seconds with 10 queries