Phrasal verbs are verb + particle pairs that change meaning, and learning the most common ones first makes daily English sound natural.
Phrasal verbs show up all over: chats with friends, emails to teachers, job messages, movies, and class notes. If you’ve read a sentence and thought, “I know each word, so why don’t I get it?”, a phrasal verb was probably sitting there, quietly changing the meaning.
This article gives you a set of high-utility phrasal verbs, shows what they mean in plain English, and teaches the grammar moves that stop common mistakes.
What A Phrasal Verb Is
A phrasal verb is a verb plus a short word like up, out, in, off, or on. That second word is often called a particle. Together, they act like one verb with a new meaning.
Some pairs are easy to guess. sit down means “move to a sitting position.” Others are idiomatic. give up means “stop trying.” You can’t always translate it word by word and get the right idea.
If you want a solid definition, Cambridge Dictionary explains that a phrasal verb is a verb with an adverb or preposition (or both) whose meaning differs from its parts. Cambridge Dictionary’s “phrasal verb” definition is a good reference when you’re checking a new one.
Why They Trip Learners Up
They trip people up for three reasons. First, one phrasal verb can carry more than one meaning. take off can mean remove clothing, leave quickly, or (for a plane) rise into the air.
Second, many phrasal verbs are informal, so you’ll hear them in speech before you study them. That can feel like people know a secret code.
Third, word order can change. Sometimes you can place the object in the middle, sometimes you can’t. That “small” rule changes whether your sentence sounds natural.
Some Common Phrasal Verbs For Daily Life And Study
Start with verbs you can use this week. The list below leans on daily actions: starting, stopping, continuing, arranging, delaying, learning, and fixing problems. Read the meaning, then say the sample line out loud. If you can say it smoothly, you’re ready to use it.
Getting Started And Keeping Going
These help you talk about beginning tasks, staying on track, and finishing.
- get up — wake up and leave bed. Try: “I get up at 7 on weekdays.”
- go on — continue. Try: “Go on, I’m listening.”
- carry on — continue, often after a pause. Try: “We carried on after lunch.”
- give up — stop trying. Try: “Don’t give up on that essay.”
- finish up — complete the last part. Try: “I’ll finish up and send it.”
Planning, Timing, And Changes
These show up in classes, meetings, travel plans, and deadlines.
- set up — arrange or create. Try: “I set up a folder for the project.”
- put off — delay. Try: “I put off the homework and paid for it later.”
- work out — find a solution. Try: “We worked out a schedule that fits.”
- figure out — understand or solve. Try: “I can’t figure out this graph yet.”
Communication And Relationships
These help you speak politely, fix confusion, and keep plans clear.
- get back to — reply later. Try: “I’ll get back to you by Friday.”
- check in — contact to see how things are. Try: “I’ll check in after your interview.”
- bring up — mention a topic. Try: “She brought up the grading policy.”
- make up — invent a story. Try: “He made up an excuse.”
- run into — meet unexpectedly. Try: “I ran into my teacher at the store.”
Reading, Learning, And Fixing Mistakes
These suit students: study habits, research, writing, and revision.
- look up — search for info. Try: “I looked up the word and wrote it down.”
- write down — record on paper or notes. Try: “Write down the answers.”
- go over — review. Try: “Let’s go over the feedback.”
- hand in — submit work. Try: “Please hand in your assignment by noon.”
British Council notes that phrasal verbs are common in English and that they’re made from a verb plus a particle, with word order rules that depend on the type. Their explanation is clear and learner-friendly. British Council’s phrasal verbs grammar page is a handy check when you’re unsure about placement.
How To Use Phrasal Verbs Without Word-Order Errors
Here’s the part that makes learners freeze: where to put the object. The good news is that you don’t need to memorize fifty rules. You need two buckets.
Separable Phrasal Verbs
With many phrasal verbs, you can place the object between the verb and the particle or after the particle.
Try these patterns:
- turn off + noun: “Turn off the light.” / “Turn the light off.”
- write down + noun: “Write down the answer.” / “Write the answer down.”
One rule feels strict, and it helps: if the object is a pronoun (it, them, him, her), it goes in the middle.
- Right: “Turn it off.”
- Right: “Write it down.”
- Wrong: “Turn off it.”
Inseparable Phrasal Verbs
Some phrasal verbs don’t allow the object in the middle. The object comes after the full verb.
- “I ran into my teacher.”
- “We’re looking after the kids.”
If you try to split these, your sentence sounds off, even if each word is correct.
Table Of High-Utility Phrasal Verbs By Situation
This table groups common phrasal verbs by what you’re trying to say. Use it like a menu: pick the situation first, then grab one verb that fits.
| Situation | Phrasal verbs | What they help you say |
|---|---|---|
| Starting a task | get on with, start off, set up | You began, you arranged something, you moved into action |
| Continuing | carry on, go on, keep up | You didn’t stop, you stayed at the same pace |
| Stopping | give up, call off, shut down | You ended effort, you canceled, you closed a system |
| Delaying | put off, hold off | You postponed and bought time |
| Understanding | figure out, work out | You solved, you got the idea |
| Checking | check in, look over | You confirmed details, you reviewed |
| Submitting | hand in, turn in | You gave work to a teacher or office |
| Recording | write down, note down | You saved info so you won’t lose it |
| Meeting by chance | run into, bump into | You met someone unexpectedly |
| Getting well again | get over, bounce back | You felt better after illness or a setback |
Particle Patterns That Help You Guess Meaning
You can’t guess each phrasal verb, yet particles do carry habits. When you notice those habits, new phrases feel less random.
Up Often Signals Completion Or Increase
finish up ends a task. speed up means go faster. set up means arrange and get ready. “Up” often feels like “to a final point.”
Out Often Signals Removal Or Finding
find out means learn new info. run out (of) means you have none left. work out can mean “find a solution.”
Off Often Signals Separation Or Cancellation
take off removes something from your body. cut off separates. call off cancels. drop off can mean “leave someone or something at a place.”
On Often Signals Continuation Or Connection
go on and carry on keep things moving. put on means wear. log on connects you to a system.
Table For Separable And Inseparable Patterns
Use this as a fast check. If you see a pronoun object, the separable ones place it in the middle. The inseparable ones keep the object at the end.
| Phrasal verb | Pattern | Sample line |
|---|---|---|
| turn off | Separable (pronoun in middle) | Turn it off before class. |
| write down | Separable (pronoun in middle) | Write them down while you listen. |
| pick up | Separable (noun can move) | Pick up the book / Pick the book up. |
| look after | Inseparable | She looks after her little brother. |
| run into | Inseparable | I ran into my teacher yesterday. |
| get over | Inseparable | He got over the cold in a week. |
| come across | Inseparable | I came across a useful article online. |
Common Mistakes And Clean Fixes
Here are mistakes that show up again and again, plus a clean fix that keeps your sentence natural.
Mixing A Formal Verb With An Informal Phrasal Verb
Sometimes the tone clashes. In a formal email, “put off” can sound casual. Swap it for “postpone.”
Guessing The Word Order With Pronouns
This is the classic slip: “Turn off it.” If a separable phrasal verb takes a pronoun object, place the pronoun in the middle: “Turn it off,” “Write it down,” “Pick it up.”
Overusing One Safe Verb
Many learners lean on get for all things. It works, yet it can make your speech repetitive. Pick one extra verb per week and rotate it in: work out, set up, hand in, go over.
A Practice Routine That Sticks
You don’t need to memorize long lists. You need spaced repeats and real sentences. Here’s a routine that fits into a busy week.
Day 1: Pick Five And Make Them Yours
Choose five from this article. Write one sentence for each that matches your life. Keep the sentences short and real.
Day 2: Say Them Out Loud
Read yesterday’s sentences aloud twice. Then change each sentence once. Change the time, the person, or the place. This forces your brain to build grammar, not just copy.
Day 3: Use Them In A Message
Send a text to a friend or classmate using one phrasal verb. Keep it natural. “Can you check in later?” “I’ll get back to you tonight.”
Day 4: Review And Rotate
Add two new verbs next week and keep three old ones. That mix gives you fresh input plus repetition.
A Simple Self-Check Before You Use A New One
Before you drop a new phrasal verb into a sentence, run this quick check:
- Do I know the meaning in this context?
- Is it separable or inseparable?
- If I’m using it or them, did I place the pronoun correctly?
- Does the tone match the situation: chat, class, or formal email?
If you can answer those four, you’re ready to use it without second-guessing.
A Mini List You Can Save
If you want one compact set to keep on your phone, save this list. It’s built around tasks students face all the time.
- set up — arrange
- put off — delay
- work out — solve
- figure out — understand
- go over — review
- write down — record
- hand in — submit
- get back to — reply later
- run into — meet unexpectedly
- give up — stop trying
Learn these, use them in your own sentences, and you’ll hear them all the time. Once they feel normal, adding new ones gets easier.
References & Sources
- Cambridge Dictionary.“Phrasal verb | English meaning.”Defines phrasal verbs as verb + particle combinations with meanings that differ from the parts.
- British Council LearnEnglish.“Phrasal verbs.”Explains how phrasal verbs work and outlines basic word-order patterns for learners.