The Big Book of English Expressions and Phrasal Verbs for ESL and English Learners; Phrasal Verbs, English Expressions, Idioms, Slang, Informal and Colloquial Expression by Thomas Celentano

The Big Book of English Expressions and Phrasal Verbs for ESL and English Learners; Phrasal Verbs, English Expressions, Idioms, Slang, Informal and Colloquial Expression by Thomas Celentano

Author:Thomas Celentano
Language: eng
Format: epub
Tags: ielts, esl, esol, learn english, toeic, toefl, cambridge, english phrasal verbs, english idioms, english expressions
Publisher: Thomas Celentano
Published: 2020-12-11T00:00:00+00:00


Pull out (separable):

(1) To remove, sometimes with force, as in this example: I pulled the young boy out of the water.

(2) To leave, or to vacate an area, as in this example: The military pulled out of the area because it was finished with its operations.

More examples:

(1) The firemen pulled the woman out of the burning house.

(2) The Navy pulled its ships out of the area because they were needed elsewhere.

Pull over (separable):

(1) To drive a vehicle over to the side of the road, as in this example: I pulled the car over to let the ambulance go by.

More examples:

(1) The policeman told me to pull my car over to the side of the road.

(1) The truck driver pulled over so he could check his tires.



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