100 Most Common English Phrasal Verbs (with Examples)
Phrasal verbs are everywhere in real English — and most textbooks barely cover them. Here are the 100 you actually need, with meanings and examples.
1What Are Phrasal Verbs (and Why They're Everywhere)
A phrasal verb is a verb combined with one or two small words — a preposition, a particle, or both — that together carry a meaning you cannot predict from the individual parts. "Give" means one thing. "Give up" means something completely different. "Give in," "give out," and "give away" each mean something different again. The small word changes everything.
Native English speakers use phrasal verbs constantly — not just in casual conversation but in meetings, podcasts, news broadcasts, films, and even formal writing. Researchers who study spoken English consistently find that phrasal verbs appear more often than their single-word equivalents. You are far more likely to hear "find out" than "discover," "put off" than "postpone," or "bring up" than "raise" in natural speech.
That means if you cannot recognize and use common phrasal verbs, you are missing a significant chunk of real English. This article covers the 100 most common ones, grouped by base verb so they are easier to learn and compare. Every entry has a clear meaning and a real example sentence.
Key insight: Phrasal verbs are not slang. They are the standard vocabulary of spoken English and informal writing. Avoiding them makes your English sound formal and unnatural.
2Why Phrasal Verbs Feel So Hard
If you find phrasal verbs confusing, you are in good company. Even advanced learners often say they are the hardest part of English vocabulary. There are four main reasons for this:
The good news is that you do not need to memorize all of them at once. Research on vocabulary acquisition shows that the top 100 phrasal verbs cover the vast majority of real usage. Learn those first and the long tail becomes much more manageable.
3Separable vs Inseparable Phrasal Verbs
One of the most useful things to know about any phrasal verb is whether it is separable. This determines whether you can place a noun object between the verb and the particle — and whether you must do so when the object is a pronoun.
You can put the object before or after the particle. "Turn off the TV" and "Turn the TV off" are both correct. But with a pronoun, only the split version works: "Turn it off" is correct — "Turn off it" is not.
The verb and particle must stay together. The object always comes after the full phrasal verb: "She looked after the children" — never "She looked the children after." Pronouns follow the same rule: "She looked after them."
In the lists below, most entries are followed by a natural example that shows the word order. If an example splits the verb and particle, the phrasal verb is separable; if the object always follows both words, it is inseparable. Using the wrong order is one of the most common mistakes intermediate learners make — so pay attention to the pattern in each example.
Tip: When you save a new phrasal verb, always note whether it is separable or not. Write two short example sentences — one with a noun object and one with a pronoun — so the word order becomes automatic.
4Phrasal Verbs with GET (16 verbs)
"Get" is one of the most versatile verbs in English, and its phrasal verb forms are among the most common in everyday speech. These 16 are essential — you will encounter all of them within the first few hours of listening to natural English.
She gets up at six every morning to go to the gym.
He gets along well with all of his colleagues.
They finally got away for a long weekend in the mountains.
I got back from the conference late last night.
We can get by on one income for a few months if we are careful.
All this rainy weather is really getting me down.
What time does your flight get in?
She got into podcasting during the lockdown and never stopped.
Get off the bus at the third stop and walk two blocks north.
How are you getting on with your new project?
He decided it was time to get out of the corporate world.
It took her months to get over losing that job.
I finally got rid of all those old books I was never going to read.
I could not get through to the office — the line was busy all day.
Let's get together for coffee before the holidays.
What have you been getting up to lately?
5Phrasal Verbs with TAKE, PUT and BRING
"Take," "put," and "bring" power dozens of high-frequency phrasal verbs. Learning them together helps you see the patterns — how a shared particle like "off" or "up" creates related meanings across different base verbs.
The plane took off two hours late due to the storm.
She took on three extra clients this quarter and is feeling overwhelmed.
He took her out to dinner to celebrate the promotion.
A larger company took over their startup last spring.
I took up running last year and it has changed my mornings.
Please put your toys away before dinner.
Stop putting off that difficult conversation — it only gets harder.
She put on her jacket and headed out into the cold.
It took firefighters two hours to put out the blaze.
I do not know how she puts up with all that noise every day.
The new regulations were designed to bring about lasting change.
That song brings back memories of our road trip.
He brought up the budget issue right at the end of the meeting.
Competition really brings out the best in her.
Can we bring the deadline forward by a week?
6Phrasal Verbs with COME and GO
"Come" and "go" are the most basic verbs of movement in English, but their phrasal forms extend far beyond physical motion. Many express change, progress, surprise, and social interaction.
I came across an old photo album while cleaning the attic.
How is your French coming along these days?
She moved abroad for two years but came back last autumn.
He came down with a bad cold the night before the presentation.
Her new book comes out in September.
Do you want to come over for dinner on Friday?
Something came up at work and I had to cancel my plans.
The team came up with a creative solution in under an hour.
Go ahead and start without me — I will be five minutes late.
She did not fully agree but went along with the plan anyway.
They went back to the restaurant where they had their first date.
The alarm went off at three in the morning and woke everyone up.
What is going on in the meeting room?
They go out every Friday evening to unwind after the week.
Let's go over the contract one more time before signing.
7Phrasal Verbs with LOOK, TURN and GIVE
"Look," "turn," and "give" each have a rich family of phrasal verbs that describe direction, change, and transfer. These are especially common in both conversation and writing.
Could you look after my cat while I am away?
Looking back, I am glad I made that decision.
I have been looking for my keys for the past twenty minutes.
I am really looking forward to the summer holidays.
The manager promised to look into the complaint right away.
Look out — there is ice on the steps.
Look up the word in a dictionary if you are unsure.
She turned down the job offer because the commute was too long.
Turn the TV off before you go to bed.
Can you turn on the heating? It is freezing in here.
The party turned out to be much more fun than I expected.
He turned up at the party two hours late without an explanation.
Her expression gave away exactly how she felt about the news.
After weeks of nagging, he finally gave in and bought the new sofa.
Never give up on something you really care about.
8Phrasal Verbs with SET, BREAK and RUN
"Set," "break," and "run" contribute some of the most useful and widely used phrasal verbs in English. Many of these appear constantly in business, news, and everyday conversation.
We set off early to avoid the traffic on the motorway.
She set out to prove that the theory was wrong.
They set up a small business from their kitchen table.
The power cut set the project back by almost a week.
The car broke down on the highway and we had to call for help.
Sorry to break in, but we are almost out of time.
A fire broke out in the warehouse early on Sunday morning.
Scientists believe they have broken through in the search for a treatment.
They broke up after three years together.
I ran into an old school friend at the supermarket yesterday.
We ran out of coffee this morning — can you grab some on your way home?
You cannot just run away from your problems.
The meeting ran over by half an hour and everyone was late for lunch.
9More Everyday Phrasal Verbs You'll Hear Daily
These phrasal verbs span multiple base verbs and are among the most common in casual speech, workplace conversation, and everyday English media. Together with the earlier sections, they bring the total to well over 100.
Did you find out what time the train leaves?
I finally figured out how to use the new software.
Can you fill me in on what happened at the meeting?
You will need to fill out this form before your appointment.
They called off the outdoor concert because of the forecast.
He said he was busy and would call me back in an hour.
Hold on a second — I need to grab my coat.
Road works are holding up traffic on the main road.
Carry on with your work — I will be back in a moment.
Engineers carried out a full inspection of the bridge.
She was finding it hard to keep up with the rest of the class.
Just keep on trying — it will click eventually.
Only half the guests showed up to the event.
We missed the last bus and ended up walking home in the rain.
I hope this new strategy works out for the team.
We need to sort out the delivery issue before the client calls back.
She pointed out a mistake in the third paragraph.
Stop making things up — just tell me what really happened.
10How to Actually Learn and Remember Them
Reading a list of phrasal verbs is not the same as learning them. The difference between knowing a phrasal verb on paper and being able to use it naturally comes down to how you study it. Here are the approaches that research and experience both support:
Important: do not aim to learn all 100 phrasal verbs in one sitting. Choose 5–8 that you find most useful or most confusing, learn them thoroughly this week, then return for the next set.
11How FlexiLingo Helps You Master Phrasal Verbs
The hardest part of learning phrasal verbs is not memorising lists — it is meeting them in real speech, at natural speed, with enough context to understand what they mean. FlexiLingo is built for exactly that: it puts a learning layer on top of the videos and podcasts you already want to watch, so every phrase you encounter becomes a lesson.
Watch YouTube, BBC Audio, and podcasts with accurate dual subtitles. When a native speaker uses a phrasal verb at full speed, you see it on screen in its natural sentence — not as a dictionary entry.
Click on "come across" or "put off" mid-video to see the full meaning, an example, and a translation in your language — without pausing or switching tabs.
Add a phrasal verb to your vocabulary collection along with the complete sentence it came from. That context is what makes it memorable and ensures you save the right meaning.
Your saved phrasal verbs automatically flow into smart flashcard reviews timed to resurface them just before you would forget them — so what you learn from real content actually stays.
Frequently Asked Questions
Most researchers and teachers agree that the top 100–150 phrasal verbs cover the vast majority of everyday usage. If you know the 100 in this article and can use them naturally, you will sound fluent in almost any informal conversation. You can then expand from there as you meet new ones in context.
There is no single rule that covers all cases, but there are patterns. Phrasal verbs that take a direct object (take something off, put something away) are usually separable. Phrasal verbs with a preposition rather than an adverb particle (look into something, go over something) are usually inseparable. The most reliable approach is to note the word order in example sentences as you learn each one.
Both have a role. A well-organised list like this one gives you an efficient overview and helps you spot patterns. But research consistently shows that vocabulary sticks best when you later encounter it in real, memorable contexts. Use the list to get familiar, then look for each phrasal verb in podcasts, videos, and conversations to cement it.
English is highly context-dependent, and particles like "up," "out," and "off" carry loose conceptual meanings that shift depending on the base verb. "Up" often implies completion or increase; "out" often implies emergence or exhaustion; "off" often implies departure or discontinuation. Once you start noticing these patterns across many phrasal verbs, new ones become easier to guess and remember.
The fastest route is to pick five phrasal verbs per week, create your own example sentences using real situations from your life, and then use them in a conversation or voice note the same day. Combining personalised production with spaced repetition review and exposure to real audio will move a phrasal verb from recognition to automatic use faster than any other method.
Hear Phrasal Verbs in Real English — and Remember Them
Watch videos with accurate subtitles, tap any phrasal verb to understand it instantly, and save it with context for spaced review.