Phrasal verbs are idiomatic expressions, combining verbs and prepositions to make new verbs whose meaning is often not obvious from the dictionary definitions of the individual words. They are widely used in both written and spoken English, and new ones are formed all the time as they are a flexible way of creating new terms.
A phrasal verb is
simply a short phrase made up of a verb (e.g. give) plus one or two
prepositions (e.g. in; up on). So, “give in” is a phrasal verb.
“Give up on (someone)” is also a phrasal verb. Each phrasal verb has its unique
meaning(s) which is different from the meaning(s) of the verb itself. For example,
the meanings of “give”, “give in”, “give up on” are totally different. so in
that proyect we talk about all phrasal verbs.
TASKS
PROCESS
RESOURCES
CONCLUSION
TASKS
PROCESS
RESOURCES
CONCLUSION
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario