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Forum "Grammatik" - phrasal verb, prepositional v.
phrasal verb, prepositional v. < Grammatik < Englisch < Sprachen < Vorhilfe
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phrasal verb, prepositional v.: Berichtigung
Status: (Frage) beantwortet Status 
Datum: 20:46 Mo 07.11.2011
Autor: APinUSA

Aufgabe
Find two phrasal and two prepositional or phrasa-prepositional verbs. explain why they belong to these special classes of verbs.


Are my examples right?

phrasal verb:
-> putting up
-> locked in

phrasal prepositional verb
-> fall down
-> thank (God) for
-> drowning in

But what is the right explaination?

Thanks for the help
Maria


        
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phrasal verb, prepositional v.: Antwort
Status: (Antwort) fertig Status 
Datum: 22:15 Mo 07.11.2011
Autor: reverend

Dear Maria,

you are always welcome to ask a question in this forum/board. Let me just mention that there may be more specialised ones like the ones at []Leo. Especially when studying languages, I would strongly recommend you to join such a place with more specialised users and more traffic. There's a number of such sites.

As you can see, I would rather consider myself to be a BE speaker whereas your nickname seems to imply an AE bias.

Having said that, let's turn to your request:

> Find two phrasal and two prepositional or
> phrasal-prepositional verbs. explain why they belong to
> these special classes of verbs.
>  
> Are my examples right?
>  
> phrasal verb:
>  -> putting up

>  -> locked in

There's supposed to be an infinitive, though you examples are understandable. The latter one is perfectly alright but the former seems more than just slightly dubious. To "put up" is usually used as a prepositional verb, thus requiring an object. Its pure uses are scarce.

> phrasal prepositional verb
>  -> fall down

>  -> thank (God) for

>  -> drowning in

These are definitely wrong. All three of them are prepositional verbs. A phrasal prepositional verb does require a core verb plus two more words (one usually being an adverb and the other a preposition) and will even need to be followed by at least a third, i.e. an object.

> But what is the right explaination?

Explanation.

The best one I could find on the internet is []this. It really doesn't leave much to be said. At the same time, it is stuffed with examples galore... ;-)

> Thanks for the help

Possible. Thanks for help comes over (phrasal!) more naturally to me. Thanks for helping (me) out would be either phrasal or prepositional depending on the existence of an object. Thanks for helping me out with this would be a double prepositional construction, whereas "thanks for the information you are backing me up with" would be considered phrasal prepositional although it doesn't necessarily have to be classified as such because of the existence of two objects.

Please do read the document that I have linked up above (btw, just a phrasal construction). It's as instructive as you could possibly desire.

All the best,
reverend


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phrasal verb, prepositional v.: thanks
Status: (Mitteilung) Reaktion unnötig Status 
Datum: 16:08 Di 08.11.2011
Autor: APinUSA

Wow thank you that was/is very helpful! I will read the link right now :)

Maria


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phrasal verb, prepositional v.: Frage (überfällig)
Status: (Frage) überfällig Status 
Datum: 16:19 Di 08.11.2011
Autor: APinUSA

Hello,

here my second try:


-> a lot of
and -> came back
and -> could be

are  phrasal verbs? (no object needed)

And -> told me
-> help me
are prepositional verbs?

I hope with the help of the link I got it right?

Maria

P.S. I will look into www.leo.org too :)


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phrasal verb, prepositional v.: Fälligkeit abgelaufen
Status: (Mitteilung) Reaktion unnötig Status 
Datum: 16:22 Mi 16.11.2011
Autor: matux

$MATUXTEXT(ueberfaellige_frage)
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