Thanks for clicking, and welcome to this lesson on "20 Intransitive Phrasal Verbs".
"Intransitive", this means these phrasal verbs do not have objects.
Now, some examples of transitive phrasal verbs are, for example: "My friend opened up a business."
"Business" is an object, my friend opened it, and he opened up a business.
"I will call you back", "you" are the object and I will call you back, so these two examples:
"Open up a business", "Call someone back", they both have objects which means they are
These phrasal verbs don't have objects, no objects, they just exist by themselves.
They don't need an object after.
Okay?
So, let's look at the first 10.
First: "break down".
So, here, this means that your car stopped working.
Now, you can't say, like: "My car broke down", you know, something else, like if I ran over
a motorcycle with my car, say: "My car broke down a motorcycle."
Okay?
It's just: "My car broke down.
Other things that can break down: Your computer, your phone, usually mechanical things-okay?-or
Next:
"Catch on".
If something catches on, it means it starts to become popular.
So, viral videos on YouTube catch on.
Okay?
For example: "That new dance is really catching on."
I'm not going to mention the dance and the example, because by the time you see this
video, there's probably a new Gangnam Style or a new dab, or something like that available
to the young kids out there in the dance clubs.
So: "That new dance is really catching on", it means that that dance is becoming popular.
"Die out".
If something dies out or is dying out, or has been dying out, it means it is slowly
dying, slowly decreasing in popularity.
So, for example: "Blackberry", the company, the cellphone company.
"Blackberry has been dying out for years, for many years."
So, the Blackberry is not as popular as, you know, it was or is not as popular as the iPhone
or Android phones, so the company's popularity has been dying out.
Okay?
If a species of animal, or insect, or anything is going extinct, you can also say: "That
animal, that species is dying out."
So, bees, for example, are dying out across the world, which means we will all be dead
soon.
So: "to drop by", this means to make a quick stop, make a quick visit.
Now, you're saying: "Alex, you said intransitive phrasal verbs have no object.
Well, you're not dropping the bank, you're not doing something to the bank.
The bank is not an object, here.
The bank is merely a location.
Okay?
So: "Can we drop by?", "Can we stop...?"
"Can we drop by the bank?", "Can we make a visit by the bank?", "Can we stop by grandma's
house?", "Can we stop by the grocery store?", "Can we make a stop and then continue to another
location?"
Okay?
So: Where did you, you know, end your travels?
Not only a physical location, it can also be, you know: "Where did you end up in your
Where did you finish in your career?"
Okay.
"I ended up working for Apple."
Or: "I ended up working for Microsoft."
I ended up doing something, my final location, my final destination in my work life or in
my personal life, or a physical location, too, it can be.
Where did you end up moving to?"
-"Oh, we ended up moving to London", for example.
Or: "We ended up moving to Cadaqu�s", whatever.
"Get back".
So: "We got back from vacation yesterday."
So: "to get back" in this context means to return.
So: "We got back from vacation yesterday."
We returned from vacation yesterday.
Okay?
So if you're telling someone to go ahead, you're telling them to go before you, and
you will catch up with them later.
Okay?
So, you and your friend, you have a plan and, you know, you have to do something at home
first, maybe wash your dishes or do the laundry, or I don't know, help your sister with something,
or help your son or daughter with their homework, and you say: "Okay, you go ahead.
I will be, you know, 15 minutes late", for example.
"Grow up".
So: "to grow up" means to mature, where you became an adult or where you grew up.
"They grew up in Bras�lia", so that is where they were born, and that is where, you know,
Turned from children into adults, or adolescents and everything.
So: "They grew up in Bras�lia."
You can't, like, grow up a person, grow up a thing, grow up an object.
Okay?
You can grow the flowers, you can grow things in a garden, but you can't grow up flowers.
It doesn't really exist, that expression.
"Hold on".
So: "Could you hold on a minute?"
So this just means to, you know, wait.
So, if you ask someone to hold on, you can't hold on something.
You can, like, hold on: "Just hold on.
Okay?
The opposite of "move in" is "move out".
When, you know, you get a new apartment, a new house, a new change where you are living
and you move your furniture, you move all the things you have, your clothes, your bed,
If you have a new neighbour, for example: "Oh, you're new.
You could say: "I moved in last week."
Okay?
And if you say: "move into", then you can have an object.
You can say: "I moved into my apartment."
But here, "move in", intransitive.
Okay.
Okay.
10 more?
10 more.
All right, next we have: "set off".
So: "to set off" is used in a very specific context, this means that you start a journey
So, for example: "We set off at 6 o'clock."
This could be a present sentence or it could be a past sentence, because the past of "set"
is "set", so you could say, you know: "Our boat" or "We got in the car and started our
journey at 6 o'clock.", "We set off at 6 o'clock."
Or, in the future: "Oh, we set off at 6 o'clock.
Okay?
So, this means to appear, what time you appeared at a place.
So: "When are you going to show up?"
If you're talking to a friend and they're waiting for you somewhere, like at the mall
or in front of the movie theatre, or at a caf� somewhere and you're late, you can
say: "When are you going to show up?"
So, you know: "I'm going to show up late.", "I'm going to show up early.", "I'll show
You can use it like a command, to go slower.
Okay?
So you can ask your partner who's sitting in the car next to you in the driver seat,
they're driving too fast: "Okay, you need to slow down.
So if you are vocal about a topic that most people are quiet about, you speak out.
You can speak out against something.
For example, speak out against injustice, against keeping prisoners in prison for a
"If you're not happy, speak out."
So if you're at a job and you want to give, you know, your friend some advice because
they are not satisfied with the job: "If you're not happy, speak out.
So: "The plane takes off in 30 minutes."
So this refers to the time a plane leaves.
You can use it to talk about people, like the time you have to leave work, for example.
"I'm taking off in five minutes.", "I need to take off early.", "I'm going to take off
The most common context, though, is with airplanes, when they take off from the airport and then
So, to take off, to leave, or for a plane to leave the airport, leave the runway, go
"Turn out".
So, you can use "turn out" to talk about the final result of something, the final quality
So you can use it to talk about how a movie turned out, you know, how the final result
If you enjoyed it: "The movie turned out okay.", "The movie turned out really bad.", or "The
Now, there is a way to use "pass out" in a transitive sentence, if you can, for example,
pass out advertisements, pass out papers, this means to distribute something.
But in this context it is used intransitively.
For example: "They drank until they passed out."
So, "to pass out" means to lose consciousness, so they drank too much, too much alcohol,
You can also use "pass out", like, in an informal, slang way to mean that you fell asleep because
You can say: "Oh, I went home and I passed out in two minutes."
Okay?
So you lost consciousness, you, you know...
You went to sleep very, very quickly as if someone punched you and you passed out.
You can use this like a command.
You can watch out for something.
So: "Watch out for cars", this means be alert, be careful.
Next: "turn around".
Every time I see you, I get a little bit...
So: "Turn around and look at me."
So, "turn around".
I like to sing, so I'm going to sing.
Every time I get a little bit closer", that song.
"Turn around bright eyes", that's how it goes.
Let's stop talking about Bonnie Tyler.
Did you know there was a solar eclipse, and she sang: "Total Eclipse of the Heart" on
the day of the eclipse in 2017?
I thought that was pretty cool.
"Turn around and look at me."
"Catch up".
So, if you are behind something and you need to, you know, get to the same point as someone
else, you need to catch up with them.
I will never catch you, get to the same point as you because you're too far.
So, if your friend and you, you're driving somewhere, you're going camping and your friend,
you know, drove and they left, like, five hours ago and you think: "Okay, maybe, you
know, I'll meet them somewhere on the road."
And they say: -"Oh, I left five hours ago."
I will never catch up with you."
Okay?
All right, so just listen and repeat with me on this set of words, here.
Repeat: "set off", "show up", "slow down", "speak out", "take off", "turn out", "pass
out", "watch out", "turn around", "catch up".
Okay.
I recommend you guys, you know, watch this video again.
Do some research on your own as well, you can do that.
And if you really want to test your understanding of the material, you can always check out
While you're there, if you want to support what we do on the website financially, you
can donate at the support link.
Now, if you want to see what I'm doing, you know, sometimes I post videos, and comments,
and respond to questions - you can check me out on Facebook, add me, you know, add my
fan page; you can check me out on Twitter.
And as always, you know, you can subscribe to my YouTube channel.
If this is your first video that you're watching of me: Hey.
I'm Alex and I do a lot of this stuff.
So, you might like other stuff that I do if you like this.
Yeah?
Cool?
Okay.
So, til next time, you know what to say, it's: Thanks for clicking.
Bye.