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Get Phrasal Game Table For Dice

The document is a table listing 12 common phrasal verbs in English along with their meanings and examples. It defines phrasal verbs like "get about" meaning to be socially active, "get ahead" meaning to be successful, "get away" meaning to escape, "get back" meaning to recover or retrieve, and "get through" meaning to succeed in an examination or test. The table provides examples of using each phrasal verb in a sentence to demonstrate its meaning.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
71 views

Get Phrasal Game Table For Dice

The document is a table listing 12 common phrasal verbs in English along with their meanings and examples. It defines phrasal verbs like "get about" meaning to be socially active, "get ahead" meaning to be successful, "get away" meaning to escape, "get back" meaning to recover or retrieve, and "get through" meaning to succeed in an examination or test. The table provides examples of using each phrasal verb in a sentence to demonstrate its meaning.

Uploaded by

André Hgz
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Phrasal Verb

Meaning

Example

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9

To get about To be socially active (or around) To get ahead To be successful

Tom really gets around, doesn't he?

It's very difficult to get ahead nowadays.

To get away To escape To get back To recover or retrieve To get by To get in To get into To get off To get on with To survive financially To enter a car, train etc. To be accepted To exit from a train, bus etc. To have a good relationship with To leave

The thief got away from the police. I got my books back from Tom. Sally gets by on just $1,000 a month. Come on, get in! Let's go. He got into the university of his choice. Jerry got off at 52nd Street. I really get on well with Janet.

10 To get out

I got out of class at 3.30. He got over his operation very quickly.

11 To get over To recover from an illness or


bad occurrence

12 To get

through

To succeed in an examination, That was a difficult test to get through, test etc. wasn't it?

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