English, asked by charan9158, 11 months ago

Olivia: can you come here, please?
Charlie: sure, just let me - what I'm doing here first.
options: (a) slide at (b) runout (c) finish up (d) rush of.​

Answers

Answered by Sarmisthasengupta
0

Answer:

finish up

Explanation:

the correct option is c

Answered by phillipinestest
0

Charlie: sure, just let me  finish up what I'm doing here first.

Explanation:

Charlie: sure, just let me  finish up what I'm doing here first.

  • A phrasal verb is an idiomatic phrase that conveys a specific meaning. It is usually a verb and preposition or adverb combination.  
  • In the given sentence the subject-Charlie is already doing some work. He has to first wind it up and then attend to Olivia.
  • The most appropriate phrasal verb for this occasion is ‘finish up’.  
  • Slide at’ means to dash quickly at something,
  • ‘run out’ means to exhaust one’s energy or resources,
  • ‘rush of’ means to hurry.
  • So the most appropriate option is ‘finish up’.  

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