Phrasal verbs are multi-word verbs consisting of a verb and either an adverb or preposition, or both. Some common phrasal verbs are "back off" meaning withdraw or retreat, "ask out" meaning invite on a date, and "blow up" meaning explode or get very angry. Other phrasal verbs listed are "act like", "add up", "back down", "break down", and "break into".
Phrasal verbs are multi-word verbs consisting of a verb and either an adverb or preposition, or both. Some common phrasal verbs are "back off" meaning withdraw or retreat, "ask out" meaning invite on a date, and "blow up" meaning explode or get very angry. Other phrasal verbs listed are "act like", "add up", "back down", "break down", and "break into".
Phrasal verbs are multi-word verbs consisting of a verb and either an adverb or preposition, or both. Some common phrasal verbs are "back off" meaning withdraw or retreat, "ask out" meaning invite on a date, and "blow up" meaning explode or get very angry. Other phrasal verbs listed are "act like", "add up", "back down", "break down", and "break into".