| Separable Phrasal Verbs The object may come after the following phrasal verbs or it may separate the two parts: 
When the object of the following phrasal verbs is a pronoun, the two parts of the phrasal verb must be separated: | ||
| Verb | Meaning | Example | 
| blow up | explode | The terrorists tried to blow up the railroad station. | 
| bring up | mention a topic | My mother brought up that little matter of my prison record again. | 
| bring up | raise children | It isn't easy to bring up children nowadays. | 
| call off | cancel | They called off this afternoon's meeting | 
| do over | repeat a job | Do this homework over. | 
| fill out | complete a form | Fill out this application form and mail it in. | 
| fill up | fill to capacity | She filled up the grocery cart with free food. | 
| find out | discover | My sister found out that her husband had been planning a surprise party for her. | 
| give away | give something to someone else for free | The filling station was giving away free gas. | 
| give back | return an object | My brother borrowed my car. I have a feeling he's not about to give it back. | 
| hand in | submit something (assignment) | The students handed in their papers and left the room. | 
| hang up | put something on hook or receiver | She hung up the phone before she hung up her clothes. | 
| hold up | delay | I hate to hold up the meeting, but I have to go to the bathroom. | 
| hold up (2) | rob | Three masked gunmen held up the Security Bank this afternoon. | 
| leave out | omit | You left out the part about the police chase down Asylum Avenue. | 
| look over | examine, check | The lawyers looked over the papers carefully before questioning the witness. (They looked them over carefully.) | 
| look up | search in a list | You've misspelled this word again. You'd better look it up. | 
| make up | invent a story or lie | She knew she was in trouble, so she made up a story about going to the movies with her friends. | 
| make out | hear, understand | He was so far away, we really couldn't make out what he was saying. | 
| pick out | choose | There were three men in the line-up. She picked out the guy she thought had stolen her purse. | 
| pick up | lift something off something else | The crane picked up the entire house. (Watch them pick itup.) | 
| point out | call attention to | As we drove through Paris, Francoise pointed out the major historical sites. | 
| put away | save or store | We put away money for our retirement. She put away the cereal boxes. | 
| put off | postpone | We asked the boss to put off the meeting until tomorrow. (Please put it off for another day.) | 
| put on | put clothing on the body | I put on a sweater and a jacket. (I put them on quickly.) | 
| put out | extinguish | The firefighters put out the house fire before it could spread. (They put it out quickly.) | 
| read over | peruse | I read over the homework, but couldn't make any sense of it. | 
| set up | to arrange, begin | My wife set up the living room exactly the way she wanted it. She set it up. | 
| take down | make a written note | These are your instructions. Write them down before you forget. | 
| take off | remove clothing | It was so hot that I had to take off my shirt. | 
| talk over | discuss | We have serious problems here. Let's talk them over like adults. | 
| throw away | discard | That's a lot of money! Don't just throw it away. | 
| try on | put clothing on to see if it fits | She tried on fifteen dresses before she found one she liked. | 
| try out | test | I tried out four cars before I could find one that pleased me. | 
| turn down | lower volume | Your radio is driving me crazy! Please turn it down. | 
| turn down (2) | reject | He applied for a promotion twice this year, but he was turned down both times. | 
| turn up | raise the volume | Grandpa couldn't hear, so he turned up his hearing aid. | 
| turn off | switch off electricity | We turned off the lights before anyone could see us. | 
| turn off (2) | repulse | It was a disgusting movie. It really turned me off. | 
| turn on | switch on the electricity | Turn on the CD player so we can dance. | 
| use up | exhaust, use completely | The gang members used up all the money and went out to rob some more banks. | 
| Inseparable Phrasal Verbs (Transitive) With the following phrasal verbs, the lexical part of the verb (the part of the phrasal verb that carries the "verb-meaning") cannot be separated from the prepositions (or other parts) that accompany it: "Who will look after my estate when I'm gone?" | ||
| Verb | Meaning | Example | 
| call on | ask to recite in class | The teacher called on students in the back row. | 
| call on (2) | visit | The old minister continued to call on his sick parishioners. | 
| get over | recover from sickness or disappointment | I got over the flu, but I don't know if I'll ever get overmy broken heart. | 
| go over | review | The students went over the material before the exam. They should have gone over it twice. | 
| go through | use up; consume | They country went through most of its coal reserves in one year. Did he go through all his money already? | 
| look after | take care of | My mother promised to look after my dog while I was gone. | 
| look into | investigate | The police will look into the possibilities of embezzlement. | 
| run across | find by chance | I ran across my old roommate at the college reunion. | 
| run into | meet | Carlos ran into his English professor in the hallway. | 
| take after | resemble | My second son seems to take after his mother. | 
| wait on | serve | It seemed strange to see my old boss wait on tables. | 
| Three-Word Phrasal Verbs (Transitive) With the following phrasal verbs, you will find three parts: "My brother dropped out of school before he could graduate." | ||
| Verb | Meaning | Example | 
| break in on | interrupt (a conversation) | I was talking to Mom on the phone when the operator broke in on our call. | 
| catch up with | keep abreast | After our month-long trip, it was time to catch up with the neighbors and the news around town. | 
| check up on | examine, investigate | The boys promised to check up on the condition of the summer house from time to time. | 
| come up with | to contribute (suggestion, money) | After years of giving nothing, the old parishioner was able tocome up with a thousand-dollar donation. | 
| cut down on | curtail (expenses) | We tried to cut down on the money we were spending on entertainment. | 
| drop out of | leave school | I hope none of my students drop out of school this semester. | 
| get along with | have a good relationship with | I found it very hard to get along with my brother when we were young. | 
| get away with | escape blame | Janik cheated on the exam and then tried to get away with it. | 
| get rid of | eliminate | The citizens tried to get rid of their corrupt mayor in the recent election. | 
| get through with | finish | When will you ever get through with that program? | 
| keep up with | maintain pace with | It's hard to keep up with the Joneses when you lose your job! | 
| look forward to | anticipate with pleasure | I always look forward to the beginning of a new semester. | 
| look down on | despise | It's typical of a jingoistic country that the citizens look down on their geographical neighbors. | 
| look in on | visit (somebody) | We were going to look in on my brother-in-law, but he wasn't home. | 
| look out for | be careful, anticipate | Good instructors will look out for early signs of failure in their students | 
| look up to | respect | First-graders really look up to their teachers. | 
| make sure of | verify | Make sure of the student's identity before you let him into the classroom. | 
| put up with | tolerate | The teacher had to put up with a great deal of nonsense from the new students. | 
| run out of | exhaust supply | The runners ran out of energy before the end of the race. | 
| take care of | be responsible for | My oldest sister took care of us younger children after Mom died. | 
| talk back to | answer impolitely | The star player talked back to the coach and was thrown off the team. | 
| think back on | recall | I often think back on my childhood with great pleasure. | 
| walk out on | abandon | Her husband walked out on her and their three children. | 
| Intransitive Phrasal Verbs The following phrasal verbs are not followed by an object: "Once you leave home, you can never really go back again." | ||
| Verb | Meaning | Example | 
| break down | stop functioning | That old Jeep had a tendency to break down just when I needed it the most. | 
| catch on | become popular | Popular songs seem to catch on in California first and then spread eastward. | 
| come back | return to a place | Father promised that we would never come back to this horrible place. | 
| come in | enter | They tried to come in through the back door, but it was locked. | 
| come to | regain consciousness | He was hit on the head very hard, but after several minutes, he started to come to again. | 
| come over | to visit | The children promised to come over, but they never do. | 
| drop by | visit without appointment | We used to just drop by, but they were never home, so we stopped doing that. | 
| eat out | dine in a restaurant | When we visited Paris, we loved eating out in the sidewalk cafes. | 
| get by | survive | Uncle Heine didn't have much money, but he always seemed to get by without borrowing money from relatives. | 
| get up | arise | Grandmother tried to get up, but the couch was too low, and she couldn't make it on her own. | 
| go back | return to a place | It's hard to imagine that we will ever go back to Lithuania. | 
| go on | continue | He would finish one Dickens novel and then just go on to the next. | 
| go on (2) | happen | The cops heard all the noise and stopped to see what wasgoing on. | 
| grow up | get older | Charles grew up to be a lot like his father. | 
| keep away | remain at a distance | The judge warned the stalker to keep away from his victim's home. | 
| keep on (with gerund) | continue with the same | He tried to keep on singing long after his voice was ruined. | 
| pass out | lose consciousness, faint | He had drunk too much; he passed out on the sidewalk outside the bar. | 
| show off | demonstrate haughtily | Whenever he sat down at the piano, we knew he was going toshow off. | 
| show up | arrive | Day after day, Efrain showed up for class twenty minutes late. | 
| wake up | arouse from sleep | I woke up when the rooster crowed. | 
 
