हिंदी

A phrasal verb is a verb followed by a preposition or an adverb. Its meaning is often different from the meanings of its parts.

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प्रश्न

A phrasal verb is a verb followed by a preposition or an adverb. Its meaning is often different from the meanings of its parts. Compare the meanings of the verbs get on and run away in (a) and (b) below. You can easily guess their meanings in (a) but in (b) they have special meanings.

(a) She got on at Agra when the bus stopped for breakfast. and Dev Anand ran away from home when he was a teenager.

(b) She’s eager to get on in life. (succeed) and The visitors ran away with the match. (won easily)

Some phrasal verbs have three parts: a verb followed by an adverb and a preposition.

(c) Our car ran out of petrol just outside the city limits.

(d) The government wants to reach out to the people with this new campaign.

The text you’ve just read has a number of phrasal verbs commonly used in English. Look up the following in a dictionary for their meanings (under the entry for the italicised word).

  1. plunge (right) in
  2. kept back
  3. ramble on
  4. get along with
व्याकरण/भाषा
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उत्तर

  1. Plunge (right) in: to start doing something immediately and with enthusiasm.
  2. Kept back: to hide or not express one's feelings or thoughts; to hold back.
  3. Ramble on: to talk or write for a long time without staying on the main topic.
  4. Get along with: to have a friendly and good relationship with someone.
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अध्याय 4.1: From the Diary of Anne Frank - Exercise [पृष्ठ ५६]

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एनसीईआरटी English First Flight Class 10
अध्याय 4.1 From the Diary of Anne Frank
Exercise | Q II. 1. | पृष्ठ ५६
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