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5 Phrasal Verbs for the Holidays โ„๏ธ๐ŸŽ„๐ŸŽ [+ FREE practice download]

Phrasal verbs are no different than any other words if you want to make them part of your active vocabulary and use them effortlessly.

But first, download your FREE pdf with 10 phrasal verbs you can use for the holidays!

Get it

 

To get phrasal verbs in your active vocabulary, follow my Pronunciation Confidence Method cause itโ€™s all about practicing it right!

  1. Understand how to pronounce the phrasal verb and say it out loud several times.
  2. Look for real-life examples of how to use it and understand the meaning from the context.
  3. Make sentences of your own and drill them.
  4. Use the phrasal verb intentionally. Find a way to use it in a conversation with someone, or even when youโ€™re thinking to yourself.

Letโ€™s see how it works. Consider the phrasal verb โ€˜to dress upโ€™. To dress up means to wear special clothes (or put clothes on someone else) for a fun or formal occasion.

  1. Look up online how itโ€™s pronounced: dres uhp [IPA: dษนษ›s สŒp]
  2. Use YouGlish to see how it is used. Here are some examples:
    • My daughter dressed up as a dinosaur for Halloween.
    • Are you dressing up for the Christmas party?
  3. Now itโ€™s your turn. Try to come up with a sentence on your own. No need to write it down. Say it out loud a couple of times.
  4. Find a way to use the phrasal verb when talking to someone.

Wanna learn more phrasal verbs? Download a FREE PDF with 10 common phrasal verbs you can start using right now in the holiday season!

Watch the video below to learn more phrasal verbs:

TRANSCRIPT

Podcast intro:


Hey everyone. Welcome to the InFluency Podcast. Today we are going to talk about phrasal verbs for the holidays.

Hey everyone, what is up? It is December as I’m recording this podcast, actually I’m still recording it in November, but this episode is going to be released in December, and that means that for many of you it’s the holiday season. For some it’s not, let’s acknowledge that, but for many of you it is. And to celebrate properly the holiday season, I wanted to share a few phrasal verbs that are often used in the context of the holidays.

And as a gift, I also included a free PDF that summarizes the phrasal verbs that I discussed, with a bunch of examples and a few more that are not discussed in the episode. So if you wanna practice it and turn the insight into action, then download the free PDF and audio practice. And all the links are in the description of the podcast.

Which would also be a good opportunity for me to ask you, if you enjoy the podcast, to rate and review it. And I would be so incredibly grateful to you. Because when you rate and review the podcast, it helps push the podcast to people who actually need it and might find it beneficial. So, if you can take a moment of your time, after you download the free PDF, and go to your favorite podcast platform and rate the podcast, and even write a short review โ€“ it shouldn’t take you more than 2-3 minutes โ€“ I’d really appreciate it. So, with that, let’s talk about phrasal verbs.


Video transcript:

Hey everyone, it’s Hadar. Today we have a holiday special. We are going to talk about five phrasal verbs that you can use during the holidays, depending on the context.

So I’m going to share with you five phrasal verbs with examples. And I also have a free PDF for you and audio practice that you can download with five more phrasal verbs and more sentences to practice. Because remember, it’s not enough to see something and expect yourself to remember it. You gotta put it into practice. You gotta say it out loud quite a few times and use it in context. This is why I created for you the free PDF and audio practice. So make sure you download it, the link is in the description.

The first phrasal verb is ‘dress up’. Dress up is to wear a costume, like you do in Halloween or in Purim. And ‘dress up’ is also to get fancy for a party or an event or for dinner. So to dress up nicely. All right. And notice that when we pronounce the phrasal verb, the stress is usually on the second part of the phrasal verb, on the particle. In this case, the word ‘up’, dress up. We don’t say DRESS up, we say dress UP.

Now, to pronounce this phrasal verb, you start with a ‘dr’, and then when you connect the ‘dr’, you hear a ‘j’ sound. Listen: djre. It is totally fine, it’s like a middle sound that connects the D and the R. When you pronounce the R, make sure that the tip of the tongue doesn’t touch anything. And then you connect the S to the next word – up. So actually what we hear is ‘djre-ssup’. Let’s look at a few examples.

My daughter dressed up as a dinosaur for Halloween. My daughter dressed up as a dinosaur for Halloween. Are you dressing up for the Christmas party? Because I’m not sure what to wear, you know. Should I wear a dress or a fancy suit or should I just wear jeans? Dress up. And by the way, between us two – I really don’t love to dress up. I do sometimes, but usually I prefer to dress down.

The next phrasal verb we’re gonna talk about is ‘to pick out’, which is very relevant for Christmas when you have to select a gift for the people you love. To pick out, to select, in this context. For example: She went to the store and picked out a new Lego set for her niece. She went to the store and picked out a new Lego set for her niece.

Now, notice that here as well the stress is on the word ‘out’. The word ‘out’ is pronounced with the A as in cat. And then we shift to the ‘u’ sound – ‘au’. And then we end it with a T, could be a held D: ‘out’ or a pop T – ‘ouT’, both are fine. And the word picked starts with a P sound, it has an aspirated P, so we hear a little H right after – p(h)i. Then it’s the lax ‘i’ – pi, and then ‘kt’. We wanna connect the K to the T, right, ‘pi-cktou’. And then we connect the T also to the next word, because it starts with a vowel – picked-out. She went to the store and picked out a new Lego set for her niece.

Let’s look at another example. We were going to pick the gift out for their anniversary. So here, notice how we separated the ‘pick’ and the ‘out’. To pick a gift out. A ‘gift’ comes in between the ‘pick’ and ‘out’. ‘To pick a gift out for their anniversary’. And like I said, we have a few more example sentences in the PDF that you can download for free. Just call it my Christmas gift to you.

Speaking of presents, we have ‘to wrap up’. wrap up. Here as well, we start with an R, the W is not pronounced – ‘ra’, A as in ‘cat’ – ‘ra’. The P becomes a part of the next word because it starts with a vowel ‘ra-pup’, it’s a cup sound, ‘ra-pup’. Stress on ‘pup’ – ‘ra-PUP’, ‘ra-PUP’. When you wrap up a present or when you wrap up food, you wrap something up.

For example: We need to wrap up all the presents for our students. Listen, we need to wrap up all the presents for our students. We can’t just give it to them like that, it needs to be festive and fancy. To wrap up. And we can also say: It’s Christmas Day and I still haven’t wrapped up all the gifts. It’s Christmas day and I still haven’t wrapped up all the gifts.

And let me share with you another secret – I’m a horrible wrapper-upper. I don’t know how to wrap up gifts. This is usually the job that is executed by either my partner Gil or my daughters, they do a better job than me wrapping up gifts.

Next up we have ‘to take down’. To take down is to remove a structure, especially by separating it into pieces, right, or to take down something that is temporary. For example: I took down the decorations as soon as everyone left. I took down the decorations as soon as everyone left. Took down. So again, the stress is on ‘down’. For the word ‘took’, we start with a T sound, it’s aspirated, so we hear a slight H right after. Then we have the lax ‘u’ – cook, look, book.

Then we connect the K to the D – ‘took-down’. The ‘au’ vowel is a diphthong, just like with the word ‘out’, starts with the A as in ‘cat’. So even though it’s spelled with an O, it’s like a front A sound. ‘au’, shifting to the ‘u’ and ending with an N. Took down. Took down. Taking down the lights is my least favorite part. Taking down the lights is my least favorite part. More examples in the pdf.

The next phrasal verb for today, and the last one for this video, is to ‘shop around’. Now, to shop around is not just to go out and shop. It is actually to compare the price and the quality of a certain object or a similar object in different shops, right? So you’re actually looking for a better deal. Okay? To shop around. Shop around. And you do it before you decide what you actually wanna buy.

‘shaa’ – AA as in ‘father’, ‘sh-aa’. The P becomes the beginning of the next word, and you know why – because the next word starts with a vowel. And the phrase is always pronounced as if it’s one sound – shaa-p’. Then we have a schwa sound ‘shaa-puh’, and then ’round’ – again, an R sound, then the ‘au’ as in ‘now’, as in ‘out’, right, ‘shaa-puh-raund’. Shop around, shop around, shop around. You can find a cheaper gift if you shop around, right? I think you need to shop around if you wanna find a better deal. Shop around. Shop around. Shop around to get the best Christmas deals. ‘shaa-puh-raund’.

All right, that’s it. Five phrasal verbs for the holiday season, five more are in the PDF. But I wanna hear from you, I want to hear your favorite phrasal verb or word that people often use during the holidays. So let’s collect all those words and create a list for us to practice right below this video.

All right. Thank you so much for being here and for watching this and for practicing with me. If you celebrate the holidays this season, happy holidays and happy New Year that is coming up soon. And if you wanna connect, if you don’t follow me on social media, you can find me at @hadar.accentsway on Instagram or ‘Accent’s Way English with Hadar’ on Facebook.

Have a beautiful, beautiful rest of the day, and I will see you next week in the next video. Bye.

The InFluency Podcast
The InFluency Podcast
276. 5 Phrasal Verbs for the Holidays โ„๏ธ๐ŸŽ„๐ŸŽ [+ FREE practice download]
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