English, asked by PROAbhi45, 6 months ago

10-
Phrasal verbs are verbs followed by a preposition or an adverb that carry an
entirely different meaning than the actual verb. Fill in the blanks appropriately.

(carry on, look into, keep up, keep away, turned out, gave away)

with your
(i) Raman,
the good work.
Children, don't bother about the trip.with your preparations
(iii) The chief guest
the prizes.
(iv) Let me
the dictionary for the meaning of this word,
(v) The boys have not
well for the occasion. It's better to
........ from such kids.​

Answers

Answered by sayogeeta
0

Answer:

Phrasal verbs have two parts: a main verb and an adverb particle.

The most common adverb particles used to form phrasal verbs are around, at, away, down, in, off, on, out, over, round, up:

bring in go around look up put away take off

Meaning

Phrasal verbs often have meanings which we cannot easily guess from their individual parts. (The meanings are in brackets.)

The book first came out in 1997. (was published)

The plane took off an hour late. (flew into the air)

The lecture went on till 6.30. (continued)

It’s difficult to make out what she’s saying. (hear/understand)

For a complete list of the most common phrasal verbs, see the Cambridge International Dictionary of Phrasal Verbs.

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