1. Clicking ▼&► to (un)fold the tree-labels may facilitate locating what you want to find. 2. All politics-oriented teaching videos on this website are embedded solely for the purpose of English learning. They do not necessarily indicate or represent my personal preferences or political positions. 3. This is just one of my several websites. Please click the category-tags below to go to each independent website.
10 interesting Phrasal verbs you would love to use in your conversation
source: Learn English with Let's Talk 2014年12月8日
Phrasal verbs are usually two-word phrases consisting of verb + adverb or verb + preposition. Think of them as you would any other English vocabulary. Study them as you come across them, rather than trying to memorize many at once. Use the list below as a reference guide when you find an expression that you don't recognize. The examples will help you understand the meanings. If you think of each phrasal verb as a separate verb with a specific meaning, you will be able to remember it more easily.
Beef up
to increase or improve something, or to make it more interesting.
Ex : The organization plans to beef up its marketing effort.
Bristle at
To show anger or indignation;
Ex :She bristled at his insolent remarks.
Clam up
To say nothing. (Closing one's mouth in the way that a clam closes up.)
Ex: The minute they got him in for questioning, he clammed up.
To size someone or something up
To observe someone or something to get information; to check someone or something out.
Ex : The comedian sized the audience up and decided not to use his new material.
To crow about something / To brag about something.
Ex : Stop crowing about your successes!
She is crowing over her new car.
Fawn over
To flatter someone or attend to someone excessively
Ex : Please stop fawning all over the guests. You are embarrassing me.
Wipe out
To destroy completely; To eradicate.
Ex : In today's modern world, the old values have been wiped out.
Bounce off
To try an idea or concept out on someone or a group.
Ex : Let me bounce off this idea, if I may.
Mull over
To think about something; to ponder or worry about something.
Ex : I'll mull over your suggestions and reply to you next week.
Plod along
To move along slowly but deliberately.
Ex : The movie plodded along putting most of the audience to sleep.
# Click this line for relevant grammar videos: phrasal verbs