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The present perfect used with forand since 15 страница






to keep up (with them).

It is impossible to keep up with the. news unless you read the

newspapers.

knock

knock off (tr or intr) = stop work for the day (colloquial): English workmen usually knock off at 5.30 or 6.00 p.m. We knock off work in time for tea.

knock out (tr) = hit someone so hard that he falls unconscious- In the finals of the boxing championship he knocked out his opponent, who was carried out of the ring, (knocked his opponent out/knocked him out)

lay

lay in (tr) = provide oneself with a sufficient quantity (of stores etc.) to last for some time:

She expected a shortage of dried fruit so she laid in a large supply. lay out (tr) = plan gardens, building sites etc.:

Le Notre laid out the gardens at Versailles, (laid the gardens

out/laid them out) lay up (tr) = store carefully till needed again (used of ships, cars etc.):

Before he went to Brazil for a year, he laid up his car, as he didn't

want to sell it. (laid it up) be laid up (of a person) = be confined to bed through illness:

She was laid up for weeks with a slipped disk.

lead

lead up to (tr) = prepare the way for, introduce (figuratively):

He wanted to borrow my binoculars, but he didn't say so at once. He led up to it by talking about bird watching.

leave

leave off (usually intr) = stop (doing something):

He was playing his trumpet but I told him to leave off because the

neighbours were complaining about the noise. leave out (tr) = omit:

We'll sing our school song leaving out the last ten verses.

They gave each competitor a number; but they left out No. 13 as no

one wanted to have it. (left No. 13 out/left it out)

let

let down (tr) = lower:

When she lets her hair down it reaches her waist, (lets down her

hair/lets it down)

You can let a coat down (lengthen it) by using the hem. let someone down (object before down) = disappoint him by failing to ---- act as well as expected, or failing to fulfil an agreement:

I promised him that you would do the work. Why did you let me down

by doing so little?

He said he'd come to help me; but he let me down. He never, turned up. let in (tr) = allow to enter, admit:

They let in the ticket-holders, (let the ticket-holders in/

let them in)

If you mention my name to the door-keeper he will let you in.

let someone off (object before off) = refrain from punishing:

/ thought that the magistrate was going to fine me but he let me off. (Compare with get off.)

let out (tr)

(a) = make wider (of clothes):

That boy is getting fatter. You'll have to let out his clothes, (let his clothes out/let them out)

(b) = allow to leave, release:

He opened the door and let out the dog. (let the dog out/let it out)

live

live down a bad reputation = live in such a manner that people will forget it:

He has never quite been able to live down a reputation for drinking

too much which he got when he was a young man. (live it down) live in (intr) = live in one's place of work (chiefly used of domestic servants):

ADVERTISEMENT: Cook wanted. £ 140 a week. Live in. live on (tr) = use as staple food:

It is said that for a certain period of his life Byron lived on vinegar

and potatoes in order to keep thin.

live up to (tr) = maintain a certain standard-moral, economic or behavioural:

He had high ideals and tried to live up to them, (he tried to act in

accordance with his ideals)

lock

lock up a house (tr or intr; usually intr) = lock all doors: People usually lock up before they go to bed at night.

lock up a person or thing = put in a locked place, i.e. box, safe,

prison:

She locked up the papers in her desk, (locked the papers up/locked them up)

look

look after (tr) = take care of:

Will you look after my parrot when I am away? look ahead (intr) = consider the future so as to make provision for it:

It's time you looked ahead and made plans for your retirement. look at (tr) = regard:

He looked at the clock and said, 'It is midnight.' look back (intr), look back on (tr) = consider the past:

Looking back, I don't suppose we are any worse now than people

were a hundred years ago.

Perhaps some day it will be pleasant to look back on these things.

look back/round (intr) = look behind (literally):

Don't look round now but the woman behind us is wearing the most

extraordinary clothes. look for (tr) = search for, seek:

/ have lost my watch. Will you help me to look for it? look forward to (tr) = expect with pleasure (often used with gerund):

/ am looking forward to her arrival/to seeing her. look in (intr) = pay a short (often unannounced) visit (= call in):

/'// look in this evening to see how she is. look into (tr) = investigate:

There is a mystery about his death and the police are looking

into it. look on... as (tr) = consider:

Most people look on a television set as an essential piece of furniture.

These children seem to look on their teachers as their enemies. look on (intr) = be a spectator only, not a participator:

Two men were fighting. The rest were looking on. look on (tr), look out on (tr) (used of windows and houses) = be facing:

His house looks (out) on to the sea. (from his house you can see

the sea.) look out (intr) = be watchful, beware:

(to someone just about to cross the road) 'Look out! There's a lorry

coming! '

look out for (tr) = keep one's eyes open so as to see something (usually fairly conspicuous) if it presents itself:

I am going to the party too, so look out for me. look over (tr) = inspect critically, read again, revise quickly (look over is similar to go over but less thorough):

Look over what you 've written before handing it to the examiner.

I'm going to look over a house that I'm thinking of buying. look through (tr) = examine a number of things, often in order to select some of them; turn over the pages of a book or newspaper, looking for information:

Look through your old clothes and see if you have anything to give

away.

I'd like you to look through these photographs and try to pick out the man you saw.

He looked through the books and decided that he wouldn't like them. look through someone = look at him without appearing to see him, as a deliberate act of rudeness:

She has to be polite to me in the office but when we meet outside she

always looks through me.

look up an address/a name/word/train time/telephone number etc. = look for it in the appropriate book or paper, i.e. address book/ dictionary/time table/directory etc.:

If you don't know the meaning of the word look it up. (look up the

word/look the word up)

I must look up the time of your train, (look for it in the timetable) look somebody up can mean 'visit'. The person visited usually lives at some distance and is not seen very often, look up is therefore different from look in, which implies that the person visited lives quite close:

Any time you come to London do look me up. (come and see me)

/ haven't seen Tom for ages. I must find out where he lives and look

him up. (look Tom up/look up Tom)

look up (intr) = improve (the subject is usually things/business/world affairs/the weather, i.e. nothing very definite):

Business has been very bad lately but things are beginning to look up

now.

look someone up and down = look at him contemptuously, letting your eyes wander from his head to his feet and back again:

The policeman looked the drunk man up and down very deliberately

before replying to his question. look up to (tr) = respect:

Schoolboys usually look up to great athletes. look down on (tr) = despise:

Small boys often look down on little girls and refuse to play with

them.

She thinks her neighbours look down on her a bit because she's never

been abroad.

make

make for (tr) = travel towards:

The escaped prisoner was making for the coast. make off (intr) = run away (used of thieves etc.):

The boys made off when they saw the policemen. make out (tr)

(a) = discover the meaning of, understand, see, hear etc. clearly:

/ can't make out the address, he has written it so badly, (make the

address out/make it out)

Can you hear what the man with the loud-hailer is saying? I can't

make it out at all.

I can't make out why he isn 't here yet.

(b) = state (probably falsely or with exaggeration):

He made out that he was a student looking for a job. We later learnt

that this wasn 't true at all.

The English climate isn't so bad as some people like to make out.

(c) = write a cheque:

CUSTOMER: Who shall I make it out to? SHOPKEEPER: Make it out to Jones and Company.

make up one's mind = come to a decision:

In the end he made up his mind to go by train. make up a quarrel/make it up = end it:

Isn't it time you and Ann made up your quarrel, (made it up) make up a story/excuse/explanation = invent it:

/ don't believe your story at all. I think you are just making it up. make up (tr or intr) = use cosmetics:

Most women make up/make up their faces, (make their faces

up/make them up)

Actors have to be made up before they appear on stage. make up (tr) = put together, compound, compose:

Take this prescription to the chemist's. They will make it up for

you there, (make up the presciption/make the prescription up)

NOTICE (in tailor's window): Customers' own materials made up.

The audience was made up of very young children. make up for (tr) = compensate for (the object is very often it):

You 'II have to work very hard today to make up for the time you

wasted yesterday/to make up for being late yesterday.

We aren 't allowed to drink when we are in training but we intend to

make up for it after the race is over, (to drink more than usual then)

miss

miss out (tr) = leave out ('leave out' is more usual; see page 335).

mix

mix up (tr) = confuse:

He mixed up the addresses so that no one got the right letters.

(mixed them up)

be/get mixed up with = be involved (usually with some rather disreputable person or business):

/ don't want to get mixed up with any illegal organization.

move

move in (intr) = move self and possessions into new house, flat, rooms etc.

move out (intr) = leave house/flat etc., with one's possessions, vacate accommodation:

/ have found a new flat. The present tenant is moving out this

weekend and I am moving in on Wednesday. move on or up (intr) = advance, go higher:

Normally in schools pupils move up every year.

order

order somebody about (object before about) = give him a lot of orders (often regardless of his convenience or feelings):

He is a retired admiral and still has the habit of ordering

people about.

pay

pay back (tr), pay someone back (tr or intr) = repay:

I must pay back the money that I borrowed, (pay the money

back/pay it back)

I must pay back Mr Pitt, (pay Mr Pitt back/pay him back)

I must pay Mr Pitt back the money he lent me. (pay him back the

money/pay it back to him) pay someone back/out = revenge oneself:

I'll pay you back for this, (for the harm you have done me.) pay up (intr) = pay money owed in full (there is often a feeling that the payer is reluctant):

Unless you pay up I shall tell my solicitor to write to you.

pick

pick out (tr) = choose, select, distinguish from a group:

Here are six rings. Pick out the one you like best, (pick it out)

In an identity parade the witness has to try to pick out the criminal

from a group of about eight men. (pick the criminal out/pick him

out)

I know that you are in this photograph but I can't pick you out.

pick up (tr)

(a) = raise or lift a person or thing, usually from the ground or from a table or chair:

He picked up the child and carried him into the house, (picked the

child up)

She scatters toys all over the floor and I have to pick them up.

(b) = call for, take with one (in a vehicle):

7 won't have time to come to your house but I could pick you up at the end of your road.

The coach stops at the principal hotels to pick up tourists, but only if they arrange this in advance, (pick tourists up/pick them up) The crew of the wrecked yacht were picked up by helicopter.

(c) = receive (by chance) wireless signals:

Their SOS was picked up by another ship, which informed the lifeboat headquarters.

(d) = acquire cheaply, learn without effort:

Sometimes you pick up wonderful bargains in these markets. Children usually pick up foreign languages very quickly.

point

point out (tr) = indicate, show:

As we drove through the city the guide pointed out the most important buildings, (pointed the buildings out/pointed them out)

pull

pull down (tr) = demolish (used of buildings):

Everywhere elegant old buildings are being pulled down and

mediocre modern erections are being put up. (pull down houses/pull

them down) pull off (tr) = succeed (the object is normally it):

Much to our surprise he putted off the deal, (sold the goods/got the

contract) (pulled it off)

pull through (tr or intr) = recover from illness/cause someone to recover:

We thought she was going to die but her own will-power pulled her

through, (tr)

He is very ill but he 11 pull through if we look after him carefully.

(intr) pull up (intr) = stop (of vehicles):

A lay-by is a space at the side of a main road, where drivers can pull

up if they want a rest.

put

put aside/by (tr) = save for future use (usually money), put aside often implies that the money is being saved for a certain purpose:

He puts aside £ 50 a month to pay for his summer holiday, (puts it

aside)

Don't spend all your salary. Try to put something by each month. put away (tr) = put tidily out of sight (usually in drawers, cupboards etc.):

Put your toys away, children; it's bedtime, (put away the toys/put

them away) put something back = replace it where you found it/where it belongs:

When you 've finished with the book put it back on the shelf. put back a clock/watch = retard the hands: put the clock back is sometimes used figuratively to mean return to the customs of the past:

MOTHER: Your father and I will arrange a marriage for you when the

time comes.

DAUGHTER: You're trying to put the clock back, mother. Parents

don't arrange marriages these days! (put back the clock/put it back) put down (tr)

(a) = the opposite of pick up:

He picked up the saucepan and put it down at once because the handle was almost red-hot, (put the saucepan down/put it down)

(b) = crush rebellions, movements:

Troops were used to put down the rebellion, (put the rebellion down/put it down)

(c) = write:

Put down his phone number before you forget it. (put the number down/put it down)

CUSTOMER (to shop assistant): I'll take that one. Please put it down to me/to my account, (enter it in my account) put something down to (tr) = attribute it to:

The children wouldn't answer him, but he wasn't annoyed as he put it down to shyness.

She hasn't been well since she came to this country; I put it down to

the climate. put forward a suggestion/proposal etc. = offer it for consideration:

The older members of the committee are inclined to veto any


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