By Fatskills Exam Guides Team — the exam nerds behind 28,500+ quizzes and 2.1M practice questions across 500+ global exams.
A phrasal verb is a verb + particle (preposition or adverb) that creates a new meaning, often unrelated to the original verb.Example: "give up" (quit) ≠ "give" (hand over).
Why it’s in your exam:- Tests vocabulary depth (not just memorization).- Appears in grammar cloze, sentence transformation, and reading comprehension.- Common in IELTS, TOEFL, Cambridge exams, job interviews, and workplace emails.- Examiners love to test separable vs. inseparable, transitive vs. intransitive, and contextual meaning.
What’s really being tested?- Can you recognize the phrasal verb in a sentence? - Can you choose the correct particle (e.g., look up vs. look after)? - Can you use it in the right form (separable/inseparable, tense)? - Can you infer meaning from context when you don’t know the phrasal verb?
Before you tackle questions, own these 5 ideas:
Rule: The particle is not optional—it’s part of the verb.
Transitive vs. Intransitive
Exam trap: Some phrasal verbs can be both (He ran out of money vs. The milk ran out).
Separable vs. Inseparable
Exception: If the object is a pronoun (it, them, her), it must go in the middle (Pick it up ✅, Pick up it ❌).
Three-Word Phrasal Verbs
Rule: Always inseparable (She puts up with his laziness ✅, She puts his laziness up with ❌).
Context is King
A phrasal verb is one unit—treat it like a single verb.- He ran into an old friend (not He ran an old friend into).- Mnemonic: Think of the particle as glued to the verb.
How to remember:- Separable: If you can split the verb and particle, it’s separable.- Inseparable: If splitting sounds wrong, it’s inseparable.
Exam trap: Some verbs change meaning based on transitivity.- Take off (transitive) = remove clothes.- Take off (intransitive) = plane departs.
Intermediate (requires pattern recognition and contextual understanding).
Question:Choose the correct phrasal verb to complete the sentence: "The teacher asked the students to _____ their phones before the exam." A) turn off B) turn on C) turn up D) turn down
Step-by-Step:1. Identify the context: Phones + exam → likely stopping something.2. Eliminate options: - Turn on (start) → wrong (phones should be off). - Turn up (increase volume/appear) → wrong. - Turn down (reject) → wrong.3. Check separability: Turn off is separable (Turn them off ✅).4. Answer: A) turn off
Key Rule Applied: Context + Particle Meaning
Question:Rewrite the sentence using a phrasal verb: "The meeting was postponed until next week." → "The meeting was _____ until next week."
Step-by-Step:1. Find the keyword: Postponed = delayed.2. Match to phrasal verbs: - Put off = postpone. - Call off = cancel.3. Check grammar: - Put off is separable (Put the meeting off ✅). - Passive voice: was put off.4. Answer: "The meeting was put off until next week."
Key Rule Applied: Passive Voice + Separability
Question:"I can’t _____ his rude behavior anymore. I’m going to talk to him." A) put up with B) get along with C) run out of D) look forward to
Step-by-Step:1. Identify the meaning: Tolerate rude behavior.2. Eliminate options: - Get along with = have a good relationship → wrong. - Run out of = have none left → wrong. - Look forward to = anticipate positively → wrong.3. Check grammar: - Put up with = three-word, inseparable (Put up with it ✅).4. Answer: A) put up with
Key Rule Applied: Three-Word Phrasal Verbs + Context
Pick it up ✅, Pick up it ❌.
The "Three-Word Rule"
If a phrasal verb has three words (put up with), it’s always inseparable.
The "Particle Meaning Cheat"
Out = removal (hand out, figure out).
The "Context Clue" Strategy
People subject? → get along with, run into.
The "Eliminate the Impossible" Trick
Example: "The baby _____ at 6 AM." → woke up (not gave up).
The "Synonym Swap"
"The manager asked us to _____ the report by Friday." A) hand in B) hand out C) hand over D) hand down
Correct Answer: A) hand inExplanation: Hand in = submit. The context is submitting a report.Why the Distractors Are Tempting:- Hand out = distribute (e.g., flyers).- Hand over = give control (e.g., keys).- Hand down = pass from older to younger (e.g., tradition).
"I can’t _____ my keys. Have you seen them?" A) find out B) look for C) come across D) get over
Correct Answer: B) look forExplanation: Look for = search for. The context is searching.Why the Distractors Are Tempting:- Find out = discover information.- Come across = find by chance (not active searching).- Get over = recover from (e.g., a breakup).
"The meeting was _____ because the CEO was sick." A) called off B) called on C) called in D) called up
Correct Answer: A) called offExplanation: Call off = cancel. The context is cancellation.Why the Distractors Are Tempting:- Call on = visit or ask to speak.- Call in = request help (e.g., call in sick).- Call up = phone someone.
"She _____ her old clothes to charity." A) gave away B) gave up C) gave in D) gave out
Correct Answer: A) gave awayExplanation: Give away = donate. The context is donating clothes.Why the Distractors Are Tempting:- Give up = quit (e.g., smoking).- Give in = surrender (e.g., to pressure).- Give out = distribute (e.g., flyers) OR stop working (e.g., machine).
"The new policy _____ a lot of complaints from employees." A) brought about B) brought up C) brought on D) brought out
Correct Answer: A) brought aboutExplanation: Bring about = cause. The context is causing complaints.Why the Distractors Are Tempting:- Bring up = raise a topic (e.g., bring up an issue).- Bring on = cause (usually negative, e.g., bring on a headache).- Bring out = reveal (e.g., bring out the best in someone).
✅ Pronouns go in the middle for separable verbs (Turn it off).✅ Three-word verbs are always inseparable (Put up with it).✅ Up = completion/increase (eat up, speed up).✅ Down = reduction/stopping (calm down, turn down).✅ Context decides meaning (break down = machine OR emotion).✅ If stuck, replace with a synonym (make up → invent).✅ Eliminate impossible options (e.g., woke up for a baby, not gave up).
Practice pronoun placement (Pick it up ✅, Pick up it ❌).
Day 1 (12–24 hours): Core Rules
Do 10 MCQs (focus on meaning + grammar).
Day 2 (24–36 hours): Application
Time yourself: 30 seconds per question.
Day 2 (36–48 hours): Exam Simulation
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