Get off vocab

用Gymglish学习英语词汇小贴士和定义。
提升您的英语水平并免费试用我们的在线英语课程

测试你的英语 免费试用, 无购买义务
在 App Store、Play Store 和 Trustpilot 上排名 4,7 超过8,000,000名全球用户。

定义

Get off (of the roof!): (从房顶)离开,下来 idiom
to get off (an island): 离开(岛屿) verb

示例

  • "It's just that we're looking for a friend of ours, we're not sure if he's still alive, and we've got to find him and then get off this island."
练习 1
Fill in the blanks below with the correct phrasal verbs from the scene you just heard. Remember to conjugate the verbs correctly.
A phrasal verb is a verb followed by a preposition, adverb or adjective. Example: I walked out of the office for some fresh air.

This phrasal verb means to "enter" or "board" a vehicle other than a car. "Edward the bus every morning at 8 am near his home." (2 words)

This phrasal verb means the opposite: it means to "exit" or "descend" from a vehicle other than a car. (Not used in this scene) "Edward the bus every afternoon close to the Delavigne offices." (2 words)

This phrasal verb means to start or begin a journey or voyage. "Edward for work at around 8 am this morning, but arrived around 11 am." (2 words)

These two phrasal verbs are antonyms. One means to "stop sleeping" and the other is to "begin sleeping". (2 words each)

I usually at 6 am in the morning and drink my coffee.
At night, I usually around 1 am in front of the television.

Fill in the blanks below with the correct phrasal verbs from the scene you just heard. Remember to conjugate the verbs correctly.
A phrasal verb is a verb followed by a preposition, adverb or adjective. Example: I walked out of the office for some fresh air.

This phrasal verb means to "enter" or "board" a vehicle other than a car. "Edward gets on 1 the bus every morning at 8 am near his home." (2 words)

This phrasal verb means the opposite: it means to "exit" or "descend" from a vehicle other than a car. (Not used in this scene) "Edward gets off 2 the bus every afternoon close to the Delavigne offices." (2 words)

This phrasal verb means to start or begin a journey or voyage. "Edward [not done] set off 3 for work at around 8 am this morning, but arrived around 11 am." (2 words)

These two phrasal verbs are antonyms. One means to "stop sleeping" and the other is to "begin sleeping". (2 words each)

I usually wake up 4 at 6 am in the morning and drink my coffee.
At night, I usually [not done] fall asleep 5 around 1 am in front of the television.
1 gets on: To "get on (a bus)" is to enter or board a bus. Edward sings that he "got on the bus" like he does each day. Note that you "get on" a bus, a plane, a boat, a horse, a bike, but you "get in" a car! We use the simple present tense here because this is a regular or habitual action.
2 gets off: To "get off (the bus)" is to exit or step out of it. Note that you "get off" a bus, plane, boat, horse, bike, but you "get out of" a car! We use the simple present tense here because this is a regular or habitual action.
3 set off: To "set off (on a journey) is to begin or embark on a journey or trip, or simply to depart. In his song, Edward sings that the 'bus set off and we were on our way".
4 wake up: "To wake up" is to end one's sleep due to an alarm, a noise, sunlight, etc. The verb "to wake" is irregular: wake/woke or waked/ woken or waked. We use the simple present tense in this sentence because it is a regular or habitual action. Edward sings that he "woke up" on the bus after missing his stop.
5 fall asleep: To "fall asleep" is to go to sleep (to change from a waking to a sleeping state). Example: I was so tired, I went to bed and fell asleep immediately. The verb "to fall" is irregular: fall/fell/fallen. Edward sings that he "fell asleep" on the bus.
练习 2
"...pop your shirt off for me and hop up onto the bed"

This phrase could be rewritten " your shirt and the bed".
"...pop your shirt off for me and hop up onto the bed"

This phrase could be rewritten "Remove 1 your shirt and get on 2 the bed".
1 Remove: When the doctor asks Philip to "pop off" his shirt, she is asking him to remove it, or to "take it off". "Pop your shirt off" is an informal expression.
1 Unbutton: To "unbutton" a shirt is to "undo" its buttons. This isn't what the doctor is asking Philip when she tells him to "pop off" his shirt.
1 Lift up: To "lift (something)" is "to raise it". The doctor is not asking Philip to lift up his shirt, but to remove it entirely.
1 Put on: "To put on a shirt" expresses the opposite meaning of "to pop (a shirt) off". If someone "puts on" a shirt, they are getting dressed.
2 get on: When the doctor asks Philip to "hop up" onto the bed she wants him to get on, or to sit on the bed. "To hop" is to make a small jump, and the verb is often used idiomatically with different post-positions to indicate different types of movements: hop in, hop out, hop up, etc. Note that we can also "get on a bus", "get on a bike", or "get on a train".
2 get off: To "get off (of the roof)" refers to descending from a location, object or person. If one person is laying on top of another, one of them may say "get off of me". We could also say "get your feet off the table", which is a command to remove one's feet from the table. The doctor is actually asking Philip to get on the table, and not to descend from it.
2 jump up and down: Although the verb "to hop" does describe a small jump, the doctor asks Philip "to hop up onto the bed", which expresses a different meaning.
2 help me to move: This is incorrect. To "move" a bed is to "push" it somewhere else, or to change its position. This is unrelated to the verb "to hop up".

进一步了解…

仍然觉得使用“Get off vocab”有困难?试试我们的在线英语课程并接受免费水平评估吧!

他们的意见 :

乐趣

         

我喜欢在线做我的语言课程。每天大约10分钟就够了... 谢谢!

创新

         

我喜欢你的创新方法,在玩乐中学习语言!

独特

         

你的方法很独特! 你们的课程帮助我在海外交流期间取得了进步和自信...

进步

         

Gymglish让我提高口语和书面表达能力的机会。 我绝对不会错过的课!

更多推荐信。

您有记住这条规则的妙招吗?关于避免在“Get off vocab”上犯错的小贴士呢?
那就分享给我们吧!