Master the fixed structures that combine verb + particle + preposition
While most phrasal verbs consist of two words (verb + particle), English also has a special category of three-word phrasal verbs. These are fixed expressions that combine a verb, a particle, and a preposition to create a specific meaning. They're essential for sounding natural in English, especially in informal conversation.
Understanding three-word phrasal verbs is crucial because they follow strict rules and cannot be broken apart or rearranged.
Example: look (verb) + forward (particle) + to (preposition)
Let's see these rules in action with the most common three-word phrasal verb: look forward to.
Here are the three-word phrasal verbs you'll encounter most frequently in everyday English:
| Phrasal Verb | Meaning | Example |
|---|---|---|
| get along with | have a good relationship | I get along with my neighbors. |
| get on with | have a friendly relationship (UK) | She gets on with her colleagues. |
| put up with | tolerate | I won't put up with rudeness. |
| look up to | admire and respect | I look up to my teacher. |
| look down on | consider inferior | Don't look down on others. |
| Phrasal Verb | Meaning | Example |
|---|---|---|
| look after | take care of | Please look after my plants. |
| catch up with | reach the same point | I need to catch up with my emails. |
| keep up with | maintain the same pace | Keep up with the latest news. |
| come up with | create an idea | Can you come up with a solution? |
| get away with | avoid punishment | He got away with cheating. |
| Phrasal Verb | Meaning | Example |
|---|---|---|
| run out of | have no more left | We've run out of time. |
| look forward to | anticipate with pleasure | I look forward to the holidays. |
| cut down on | reduce consumption | I'm cutting down on sugar. |
| do away with | eliminate/abolish | Let's do away with these rules. |
Three-word phrasal verbs are ALWAYS inseparable and ALWAYS transitive. Think of them as a single, unbreakable unit that requires an object.
Mistake #1: Separating the parts
โ I'm looking the meeting forward to.
โ I'm looking forward to the meeting.
Mistake #2: Forgetting the object
โ We ran out of.
โ We ran out of coffee.
Mistake #3: Changing the word order
โ I get with along my boss.
โ I get along with my boss.
When learning three-word phrasal verbs, memorize them as complete units. Don't try to understand each word separately - learn the whole expression and its meaning together. Create example sentences for each one to help remember the context.
1. Three-word phrasal verbs = verb + particle + preposition
2. They are ALWAYS inseparable - never split the three parts
3. They are ALWAYS transitive - they always need an object
4. The word order is ALWAYS fixed - cannot be rearranged
5. Learn them as complete units, not separate words
Test your knowledge with interactive exercises on three-word phrasal verbs!