English Phrasal Verbs: The Complete Guide

English Phrasal Verbs: The Complete Guide
Vocabulary & Grammar

English Phrasal Verbs: The Complete Guide

Understand separable vs inseparable types, learn the top phrasal verbs by category, and discover the fastest strategies for making them stick.

What Are Phrasal Verbs?

A phrasal verb is a verb combined with one or two particles (a preposition, an adverb, or both) that creates a new meaning not obvious from the individual words. "Give" means one thing; "give up" means to stop trying - a completely different idea.

This is what makes phrasal verbs challenging: you cannot guess the meaning. "Look up" means to search for information. "Look after" means to take care of someone. "Look into" means to investigate. The particle changes everything.

Phrasal verb Meaning Formal equivalent
give up stop trying abandon / quit
find out discover discover / learn
put off postpone postpone / delay
look into investigate investigate / examine
bring up mention a topic / raise a child raise / mention
carry out perform / do execute / conduct
set up establish / prepare establish / arrange

Phrasal verbs are common in both spoken and written English, but especially in conversation. Avoiding them sounds stilted. Learning them - even slowly - makes your English sound far more natural.

Separable vs Inseparable Phrasal Verbs

The most important structural rule for phrasal verbs is whether the object can be placed between the verb and the particle (separable) or must come after both (inseparable).

Separable

The object can go between verb and particle, or after both

turn off the TV  =  turn the TV off   (both correct)

"She turned off her phone." / "She turned her phone off."

Pronoun rule: With a pronoun, you MUST separate. "Turn it off" is correct. "Turn off it" is wrong.

Inseparable

The object must come after the particle - never in between

look after the children   (correct)
look the children after   (WRONG)

"She looks after her elderly parents."

Most two-word phrasal verbs with a preposition (look after, run into, deal with) are inseparable. Three-word phrasal verbs (put up with, look forward to) are always inseparable.

Error (pronoun with separable): "Turn off it." / "Pick up it." / "Put on it."

Correct: "Turn it off." / "Pick it up." / "Put it on."

Pronoun objects must always go between the verb and particle for separable phrasal verbs.

Quick Reference

Separable: turn off, pick up, put on, take off, write down, fill in, figure out, hand in, switch on, wake up (someone)
Inseparable: look after, run into, deal with, come across, get over, look forward to, put up with, go through, rely on, call on

Top Phrasal Verbs by Category

Phrasal verbs are easier to learn when grouped by topic or base verb. The following tables cover the most frequently used phrasal verbs across five key categories.

Work and Study

Phrasal verb Meaning Example Type
hand in submit Please hand in your assignment by Friday. separable
put off postpone Don't put off difficult tasks. separable
carry out do / conduct We carried out the research last month. separable
set up establish / organise She set up a new online course. separable
find out discover information I need to find out the results. separable
go over review / check Let's go over the main points. inseparable
deal with handle / manage How do you deal with difficult customers? inseparable
look into investigate Management will look into the complaint. inseparable
come up with produce an idea Can you come up with a solution? inseparable
keep up with stay at the same level It's hard to keep up with new technology. inseparable

Communication and Relationships

Phrasal verb Meaning Example Type
bring up mention / raise (topic) She brought up the salary issue at the meeting. separable
get on (with) have a good relationship Do you get on well with your colleagues? inseparable
fall out (with) argue and stop talking They fell out over money. inseparable
make up reconcile after an argument They argued but made up the next day. separable
look down on consider inferior He looks down on people who don't read. inseparable
look up to admire / respect She really looks up to her mentor. inseparable
open up share feelings honestly It's good to open up to someone you trust. inseparable
point out draw attention to He pointed out an error in my report. separable

Travel and Movement

Phrasal verb Meaning Example Type
check in register on arrival We checked in at the hotel at 3pm. inseparable
check out leave a hotel / examine We checked out before breakfast. inseparable
set off start a journey We set off early to avoid traffic. inseparable
get on board (bus, train, plane) She got on the wrong bus. inseparable
get off leave (bus, train, plane) Get off at the third stop. inseparable
pick up collect someone by car I'll pick you up at 7. separable
drop off deliver someone by car Can you drop me off at the station? separable
run into meet by accident I ran into an old friend at the airport. inseparable

Problems and Solutions

Phrasal verb Meaning Example Type
give up stop trying Don't give up - you're making progress. inseparable
get over recover from It took a month to get over the illness. inseparable
sort out resolve / organise We need to sort out the visa issue. separable
put up with tolerate I can't put up with this noise any longer. inseparable
go through experience (difficulty) She's going through a difficult time. inseparable
work out find a solution / exercise We need to work out a better schedule. separable
break down stop functioning / cry My car broke down on the motorway. inseparable
come across find by chance I came across a useful article online. inseparable

Progress and Change

Phrasal verb Meaning Example Type
move on continue / progress Let's move on to the next topic. inseparable
build up gradually increase You need to build up your vocabulary over time. separable
catch up reach the same level It took three months to catch up with the group. inseparable
take up start a new hobby/activity I took up swimming last year. separable
turn into change and become The project turned into a full-time job. inseparable
improve on do better than before She improved on her previous score. inseparable

High-Frequency Base Verbs: Get and Put

Two base verbs generate more phrasal verbs than any others: get and put. Mastering these two verbs significantly expands your range.

Essential "Get" Phrasal Verbs

Phrasal verb Meaning Example
get on board / have a good relationship We get on well with our neighbours.
get off leave transport / finish work I get off at 6 today.
get up rise from bed / stand What time do you get up?
get over recover from He got over the disappointment quickly.
get through finish / contact by phone I couldn't get through to customer service.
get away with avoid punishment She always gets away with being late.
get along (with) have a positive relationship Do you get along with your manager?

Essential "Put" Phrasal Verbs

Phrasal verb Meaning Example
put off postpone Stop putting off difficult tasks.
put up with tolerate I can't put up with the noise.
put on wear / perform Put on your coat - it's cold.
put out extinguish / inconvenience They put out the fire quickly.
put down criticise / place on surface Stop putting yourself down.
put forward suggest / propose She put forward a new idea at the meeting.
put aside save / ignore for now Let's put aside our differences.

How to Learn Phrasal Verbs Effectively

Most learners try to memorise long phrasal verb lists. This rarely works. The strategies below produce far better retention.

1. Learn in Context, Not From Lists

When you encounter a new phrasal verb, always note the full sentence it appeared in. The context helps you understand meaning and register (formal vs informal) and makes it far easier to retrieve later.

2. Write a Personal Sentence Within 24 Hours

The most effective encoding technique is creating a sentence about your own life. "I need to sort out my English study schedule" uses a phrasal verb you have personalised - and personalised memories are stronger.

3. Group by Base Verb

Learning all "look" phrasal verbs together (look after, look into, look up, look forward to, look down on, look up to) lets you see how one particle shifts the whole meaning. This pattern-awareness helps you make intelligent guesses with new combinations.

4. Group by Theme

If you have an upcoming business presentation, learn the work-related phrasal verbs first. If you are booking a trip, focus on travel phrasal verbs. Relevance accelerates acquisition.

5. Focus on Output: Say It, Don't Just Read It

Phrasal verbs must be practised in speaking. The separable/inseparable distinction becomes automatic only through repeated production, not recognition. Use them in conversation with a teacher who can confirm you are using them correctly.

Priority Order

Start with the 20 most frequent phrasal verbs in spoken English. Research consistently shows these appear again and again: get on, get off, give up, find out, come back, go on, pick up, put off, set up, sort out, take off, go through, come up with, deal with, look forward to, carry out, bring up, keep up with, come across, get over.

Common Errors and How to Avoid Them

Error: "She looked the children after." (inseparable verb split)

Correct: "She looked after the children."

Error: "I will give up it." (pronoun not separated)

Correct: "I will give it up."

Error: "We postponed our meeting." (no error, but missing register awareness)

Note: "We put off our meeting" is more natural in spoken English. Both are correct, but recognising when to use each is an important fluency skill.

Error: "I am looking forward to meet you." (wrong form after phrasal verb)

Correct: "I am looking forward to meeting you." (preposition 'to' requires gerund)

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between separable and inseparable phrasal verbs?
Separable phrasal verbs can have their object placed between the verb and the particle (turn the TV off / turn off the TV). With a pronoun, you must separate them (turn it off - not turn off it). Inseparable phrasal verbs must keep the verb and particle together, and the object always comes after the particle (look after the children - not look the children after).
How many phrasal verbs do I need to know for B2 level?
Research suggests B2 learners need around 700-1,000 phrasal verb meanings. In practice, focusing on the 150-200 most frequent phrasal verbs in conversational and professional English will cover the vast majority of real usage. Start with high-frequency base verbs: get, take, put, turn, come, go, look, give, set, run.
Why are phrasal verbs so difficult for Arabic and French speakers?
Neither Arabic nor French uses a direct equivalent of English phrasal verbs. In Arabic and French, what English expresses as 'give up' or 'find out' is expressed with a single verb or a verb + noun phrase. The idea that two small words together create a completely new, unpredictable meaning is foreign to these language systems. The only effective strategy is learning phrasal verbs as fixed units, like vocabulary items.
Is it acceptable to use formal alternatives instead of phrasal verbs?
Yes, and this is often preferred in formal writing. Using 'investigate' instead of 'look into', or 'postpone' instead of 'put off', is perfectly correct and appropriate in formal contexts. However, in spoken English and informal writing, the Latin-root alternatives can sound unnatural. The goal is knowing both and choosing the register that fits the situation.
What is the best way to learn phrasal verbs?
The most effective approach is learning phrasal verbs in context, not from lists. Read example sentences, write personalised sentences with the new phrasal verb, and use it in speech within 24 hours. Grouping them by base verb (all 'put' phrasal verbs together) helps you see patterns. Grouping by topic (work, relationships, travel) also helps retention.

Use Phrasal Verbs in Real Conversation

Knowing phrasal verbs and using them automatically in speech are two different things. Direct English Live courses give you structured practice with immediate teacher feedback - the fastest way to move from recognition to natural use.

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