Az Eszterházy Károly Tanárképző Főiskola Tudományos Közleményei. 2002. Vol. 3. Eger Journal of English Studies.(Acta Academiae Paedagogicae Agriensis : Nova series ; Tom. 29)
Éva Kovács: Properties of Verbs Which Constitute Phrasal Verbs
PHRASAL VERBS 123 Drink your milk up and then you can go out to play. 8) Rejecting and surrendering. She never passed up a chance to eat in a restaurant. As soon as the money arrived I was able to settle up with him. 9) Happening and creating He informed me of a new financial agreement he had thought up. I can come now, unless any other problems crop up. 10) Collecting and togetherness We saw garbage heaped up almost to the top. Conservatives teamed up with Opposition Peers. 11) Revealing and discovering Journalists had dug up some hair-raising facts about the company. No-one owned up to taking the money. 12) Separating He spent all day sawing up the dead wood. The proceeds had to be divided up among about four hundred people. The meanings of OUT in the COBUILD Dictionary (1995:477-481) are as follows: 1) Leaving It's time to clock out. We set out along the beach. 2) Removing, excluding, preventing Squeeze the surplus water out. They can't rule out the possibility that he was kidnapped. 3) Searching, finding, obtaining Could you dig out the infant mortality rate for 1957? He might worm the story out of her by emotional pressure. 4) Appearing Suddenly she popped out from behind a bush. ... a home that would not stick out on a European estate