15 of the Most Important Phrasal Verbs (Part 2)

Aww yeah! It’s time for another episode of RealLife TV

Today we have part two of 15 of the Most Important Phrasal Verbs. If you haven’t seen part one yet, then watch it here!

Phrasal verbs are a really important part of the English language. We use them all the time, and if you’re avoiding them, then you might actually sound very unnatural when you’re speaking.

Learn these 15 phrasal verbs, and in no time you’ll be speaking English like a native!

Watch the video below, then check your understanding with the transcript. Remember to comment below with any feedback, questions, or just give me your own example using some of these phrasal verbs.

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Transcript:

Aww yeah, RealLifers, what’s going on?

This is Ethan, with another video for you.

So, today I’m going to talk to you about a subject that a lot of English learners hate to talk about, and that’s phrasal verbs.

Is this RealLife?

Alright, guys, so just 5 more.

Jot Down

The next one is “jot down.” This is a rather strange sounding one. Jot down. But we use it a lot, so, you jot down any notes or anything like this. It’s generally a quick action.

So, jot down is the same as write down. So, for example, if you someone calls your house, but they want to speak to someone else there, you might jot down a message real quick.

You might jot down these phrasal verbs, so that you don’t forget them. Jot down.

Give Up

The next one is “give up.” Give up means quit. So, maybe you say “Ah, learning English, all the grammar, the vocabulary, the phrasal verbs is just not very much fun. I think I’m going to give up.” And I, of course, as your English teacher, would say “No! Don’t give up. Just find ways to make it more fun.”

Run Out Of

Alright, so, the next one is something that you might hear a lot, it’s “run out of.” So, run out of something, what does this mean? It means when you finish something, when there’s nothing left of something, you’ve run out of it.

So, for example, this morning, I used the rest of the milk on my cereal, and so I ran out of milk. I’m going to have to go to the store and buy more.

Go Out

The next one is very common and it’s got a lot of different meanings, it’s “go out.”

So, two very useful meanings for this is go out, like go out to eat, for example, you could just say, “I don’t feel like cooking tonight, I think I’ll go out.”

And you can also use this to say that people are dating, so, “did you know that Tom is going out with Shirley?”

Hang Out

And then, the very last one, this is one that we use all the time, and that I’ve never found anything that’s quite the same in another language, in any of the other languages I’ve learned, this is “hang out.”

So, Justin and I actually did a whole video just on the term hangout, but let me just tell you real quick what this means and after I will also link to it.

So, hang out means to do something, either alone or with someone. That’s about it, it’s a very vague term.

So, you could call a friend and say, “Hey, what are you doing?” They might tell you, “Oh, I’m just hanging out.”

So, this is just a very vague way of saying that I’m not doing anything or I am doing something, you could be watching TV, you could be reading, you could be cooking, you’re just hanging out.

Or, you could say “what did you do on Saturday?” “Oh, I was hanging out with Justin on Saturday,” for example. That means I was doing something with Justin, I’m just not being specific as to what we were doing.

Extra Tips and Conclusion

Alright, guys, so, I’m going to highly recommend that you do something to remember these 15 phrasal verbs that I’ve just taught you, for example, you might want to put them on Anki, I’ll link here to an article that I wrote all about Anki, which is a great tool for memorizing things, and I’ll also link to a video that I did on some tips for memorization.

Remember that the most important thing for remembering these is to actually use them.

So, learn these, use them any time that you get the chance to speak, these are going to help you sound a lot more like a native speaker, they’re going to help you understand things better, and by learning phrasal verbs it’ll get easier to learn other phrasal verbs.

If you enjoyed this video, please subscribe and we’ll send you more, and if you have anything, any comments, any other questions, just comment below.

Alright guys, have a good one. I’ll see you later!

Watch Part 1!

  • haroun says:

    These phrasal verbs help me a lot as a beginner of this language. Thank you dude!

  • Nietzsche Martins says:

    I jot down all these phrasal verbs and I’m going to put them on Anki. Thank you I really appreciate your help.

  • Very useful! Thank you very much! You're doing a great job!!! A big hug from a portuguese living in the UK 😀

  • chellini chellini says:

    yeah cool very important phrasal verbs

  • Yati Nwe says:

    Thanks for yr generiosity 🙂