Briefly discuss the issues of phrasal verbs
Answers
phrasal verb is the combination of a standard verb such as make or put with one or two particles. In some cases the particle is an adverb such as away, together; in others it is a preposition such as through, in. Here are a few examples of the many hundreds of English phrasal verbs: pass away, pull together, fall through, make do with, put down to.
[ Return to the Phrasal Verbs index. ]
The difficulty of phrasal verbs
Phrasal verbs are one of the most difficult aspects for learners of the English language. There are three main reasons for this:
In many cases the meaning of the phrasal verb cannot be deduced from its elements, i.e., it is being used idiomatically. For example: a learner who knows that to tick is to make a checkmark may have difficulty in understanding the sentence The teacher ticked off the student for being late, in which the phrasal verb to tick off means to reprimand or to express disapproval.
Many phrasal verbs are polysemous; i.e., they have more than one meaning. The phrasal verb to put down has the literal meaning of putting something down on the table or floor. But it also has the idiomatic meanings:
to make someone feel small, to criticize and humiliate them
to kill as in the sentence I had to have my cat put down.
to stop, quash, put an end to as in the sentence The police put down the riots with unnecessary brutality.
There are difficulties with the grammar of phrasal verbs, particularly with the position of the particles. Look at the following examples:
She put down the baby. icon She put the baby down. icon
The teacher put the student down. icon The teacher put down the student. icon
The student put her bad grade down to tiredness. icon The student put down her bad grade to tiredness. icon
The importance of phrasal verbs
Phrasal verbs are very important for learners because they are so prevalent in everyday spoken and informal written language. Not only do learners need to understand the more common phrasal verbs, but they will also need to use them themselves. If they don't, and use a more formal synonym, they run the risk of sounding pompous or ridiculous to native speakers. Imagine, for example, your friend telling you Oh, do desist from talking! instead of Oh, do shut up! or Oh, do belt up! or Oh, do pipe down!