But if you just try to study lists and lists and lists of phrasal verbs, you’re going to become very confused.
You’ll start confusing one with the other. You’re going to forget and it’s horrible and you don’t want to do
that. It’s not effective. It doesn’t work. But if you learn those phrasal verbs from real situations, real
sentences, real articles, real audios, real speech, and then you always study them in the whole sentence.
So then you know the situation, right?
If you, if you get the whole sentence, the fighter knocked out the other fighter. And you’re always
studying that full phrase or sentence, the fighter knocked out the other fighter. You’re going to just
naturally know. Y’know, you’ve got that word fighter in there, helps you to remember the situation. And it
helps you to remember the meaning of that phrase, knocked out.
Or you could say the woman got knocked up by her boyfriend, right? So now you’re like, ah yeah,
boyfriend, it gives you…it gives you a clue. It gives you an idea of the meaning of that phrase. And you’ll
know that you always use that phrase in situations that describe pregnancy. This is much better than
studying lists and lists and lists of phrasal verbs.
So what’s our first rule, what’s our first secret? Always, always, always study phrases, groups of words.
Always write down a note about where the phrase came from to remind you of the situation. And no
more, never again, study just individual words. And that’s all. That is powerful Secret # 1, Rule # 1 for
learning to speak fantastic amazing English. Start using this rule immediately today, okay?
We’ll see you tomorrow for Rule 2. Bye-bye.
But if you just try to study lists and lists and lists of phrasal verbs, you’re going to become very confused.
You’ll start confusing one with the other. You’re going to forget and it’s horrible and you don’t want to do
that. It’s not effective. It doesn’t work. But if you learn those phrasal verbs from real situations, real
sentences, real articles, real audios, real speech, and then you always study them in the whole sentence.
So then you know the situation, right?
If you, if you get the whole sentence, the fighter knocked out the other fighter. And you’re always
studying that full phrase or sentence, the fighter knocked out the other fighter. You’re going to just
naturally know. Y’know, you’ve got that word fighter in there, helps you to remember the situation. And it
helps you to remember the meaning of that phrase, knocked out.
Or you could say the woman got knocked up by her boyfriend, right? So now you’re like, ah yeah,
boyfriend, it gives you…it gives you a clue. It gives you an idea of the meaning of that phrase. And you’ll
know that you always use that phrase in situations that describe pregnancy. This is much better than
studying lists and lists and lists of phrasal verbs.
So what’s our first rule, what’s our first secret? Always, always, always study phrases, groups of words.
Always write down a note about where the phrase came from to remind you of the situation. And no
more, never again, study just individual words. And that’s all. That is powerful Secret # 1, Rule # 1 for
learning to speak fantastic amazing English. Start using this rule immediately today, okay?
We’ll see you tomorrow for Rule 2. Bye-bye.
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