7 MOST USEFUL English Phrasal Verbs with "GET"! - Learn English Phrasal Verbs

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Today you're going to learn the most useful English phrasal verbs with verb "Get" First watch this and see if you understand it oh my god get up! What? What time did you get in last night? I don't know, like five Oh my god! Why!? It's your uncle's wedding today! Noooo I don't want to go! Get up! You're not getting out of this! Can't you just tell them I'm sick? Look let's just go and get it over with. It won't take long I just want to get away! Spain Fiji look -Naples! -You're finally getting around to seeing your relatives You haven't seen them in a year I don't like them I know Uncle Tom is always saying "Why aren't you married? Why don't you have kids? Why is your face so ugly?" I know I know just whatever he says don't let it get to you He's just an idiot! And anyway you have to go No! Aly goes back to sleep now! Goodnight! It's 10:30 in the morning I said goodnight! probably from context you understood a lot of it But do you know how to use all those phrasal verbs with "Get"? Well at the end of this lesson, watch that again you'll understand everything I guarantee you and you'll be able to use those phrasal verbs with get in your daily life Remember you can follow me on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook @papateachme You'll see more of London and you'll get some extra English practice and if you want extra EXTRA English practice you can join my Patreon page or join this channel as a member you'll get extra English worksheets so you can practice what you've learned in these videos The first phrasal verb is "Get up" So it's the morning you're in bed and this happens what's the phrasal verb to go from asleep to awake? "Wake up" in a present tense: "Every day I wake up at 8 o'clock" In a past tense: "Yesterday I woke up at 1 in the afternoon Sorry, it happens! Wake up is just opening your eyes in the morning but "get up" is physically removing yourself from your bed It's that moment where you say "Ok no more sleep!" It's different from "wake up" So a question for you! Tell me in the comments! What's the time difference between when you wake up and when you get up? For example, for me, when I wake up in the morning I'm on Instagram and Twitter for 20 minutes before I get up! You meet your friend and your friend says: "Come to the cinema with us tonight! It'll be fun!" but unfortunately you have an obligation "I have to work" That sucks so your friend wants you to escape your obligation, escape your responsibility Not do what you are supposed to do. There's a phrasal verb for that! "Ah no! Can you get out of it?" "To get out of something" it means to escape or avoid your responsibility, your duty, your obligation For example if he calls his boss and says "Hey is there any chance I can you know not work tonight?" and the coolest boss ever says "Yeah it's fine! Go have fun!" Then he would say "I got out of it! I got out of working" notice the verb you have +ING "I got out of..." If the thing is a verb, put +ING "I Got out of workING" For example Another way to escape is from work from school from some situation in general! For that kind of escape we use this phrasal verb... For example if your friend says: "Hey! Let's go on holiday! It'll be fun!" But for you, you have an obligation to go to work every day! and you're very busy, and you won't have free time until summer To say escape from a situation - usually work or school - but any situation you want to escape from We say "Get away" Ah I'd love to but I can't get away from work until summer! If you are working very hard right now maybe for university school, for your job When can you get away? Let me know in the comments! If you are one of those people who has a list of things to do but it takes you a very long time to do them then you need this phrasal verb for example you have something that you need to do this thing, you need to do it but you haven't done it yet We use this phrasal verb "To get around to" and the verb is in the ING form For example in my case let me show you This is my bed and... so that has been happening for about a year It is on my to-do list but I haven't fixed it yet! I should say: "I haven't got around to fixing my bed yet" I will do it just I haven't done it It's still on my list I'm not lazy I just I don't know how to fix a bed Maybe there's a YouTube tutorial but let me know in your life is there anything that you haven't got round to doing yet? Or is there anything that you recently got round to doing? Something you finally did? when you go to the doctor and you need to have an injection... yeah I hate this I hate it so much I can't look at the injection it makes me sick I want to faint I hate it I'm like this and in this case you might be thinking or saying... "Just get it over with! Just get it over with!" What does that mean? You're saying it's terrible I know but just do it! If you just do it, it's finished! That's the meaning of that expression "Just get it over with!" Let me know in the comments Are you like me? Are you like this? Terrible! This next phrasal verb is about schedules and arrivals She is asking her friend "What time do you arrive? Specifically "What time does your plane, or train, or bus, some scheduled transport arrive?" and when you're talking about the arrival time, you can talk about the person's arrival time Or the transport's arrival time "My flight gets in at 5:00 a.m." Also you can use it to talk about what time you get home. For example I went out last night I had a crazy night and I got in at 3 a.m. I didn't. That's a lie. I'm not that exciting. I'm actually a very boring person And the last phrasal verb is about your emotions Specifically someone doing or saying something that changes your emotion in a bad way It makes you angry makes you upset makes you annoyed for this situation we use the phrasal verb "Get to me" "Get to you" Let me show you an example If someone says something bad to you like "You're stupid!" Those words might make you feel angry or sad or annoyed and if that happens that means "The words get to you" They change your emotion to being sad, angry, annoyed, upset It means they change your emotion in a bad way so maybe your friend wants to tell you "Don't let him get to you! He's an idiot!" You should know that usually with this phrasal verb we use the word "Let" Because the idea is we allow these words to change our emotion in a negative way If we "allow" it to happen we "let" it happen For that reason she would say "Don't let him get to you!" or "Don't let it get to you" "Don't let it get to you!" I want you to try using this phrasal verb in the comments! Remember all of today's phrasal verbs are the most useful! Thanks for watching! After this go back to the beginning of the video Watch the thing again and see how much you understand I guarantee you, you'll understand everything And you will be able to use all of those phrasal verbs in your own way Which you should do in the comments If you liked today's video and want to improve your English even more Remember to subscribe to this channel and hit the bell! I upload twice a week and every Sunday I do a live English class! and you also have the option to join my patreon or join this channel as a member for extra EXTRA English practice in the form of worksheets debates and livestreams See you in the next class
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Channel: Learn English with Papa Teach Me
Views: 226,537
Rating: 4.9732356 out of 5
Keywords: Learn English, Papa teach me, Learn English Grammar, Learn English Vocabulary, IELTS, CAE, CPE, aprender ingles, выучить английский язык, English Vocabulary, Phrasal Verbs, ESL, English Teaching, TEFL, TESOL, TOEFL, TOEIC, تعلم اللغة الإنجليزية, phrasal verbs get, get verb, english phrasal verbs, phrasal verbs, the verb get, most useful phrasal verbs
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Length: 10min 59sec (659 seconds)
Published: Sat Jan 26 2019
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