Learn to identify, avoid, and fix the most frequent phrasal verb errors
Phrasal verbs are tricky for learners because they don't follow predictable patterns like regular verbs. Even advanced students make mistakes with word order, particle choice, and usage. The good news? Most errors fall into a few common categories that you can learn to recognize and avoid.
This lesson covers the six most frequent mistakes learners make, plus regional variations between British and American English.
Most phrasal verb errors come from applying rules from other languages or trying to translate word-by-word. English phrasal verbs have their own logic that must be learned through exposure and practice.
Some phrasal verbs cannot be split. The verb and particle must stay together.
With separable phrasal verbs, pronouns MUST go between the verb and particle.
Transitive phrasal verbs require an object. Don't leave it out!
Similar particles create completely different meanings. Choose carefully!
Phrasal verbs rarely translate word-for-word into other languages.
Using phrasal verbs in very formal writing can sound too casual.
| Common Error | Correct Form | Remember |
|---|---|---|
| Turn off it | Turn it off | Pronouns go in the middle |
| I ran my friend into | I ran into my friend | "Run into" is inseparable |
| Look forward to see you | Look forward to seeing you | "To" is a preposition here (-ing) |
| Pick up it at 5pm | Pick it up at 5pm | Separable + pronoun = split it |
| I will look into | I will look into it | Transitive needs an object |
| Get on the bus off | Get off the bus | Don't confuse on/off |
When in doubt, check a reliable dictionary that shows whether a phrasal verb is separable, transitive, and gives example sentences. Don't guess – verify!
1. Pronouns MUST go between separable phrasal verbs (turn it off)
2. Inseparable phrasal verbs NEVER split (run into him, NOT run him into)
3. Transitive phrasal verbs NEED an object
4. Don't translate literally – learn the English meaning
5. Match your register to the context (formal vs informal)
6. British and American English have different preferences
7. Similar particles create different meanings – be precise!
Practice identifying and correcting common phrasal verb mistakes!