Phrasal Expressions – Lesson 22 (English)

Phrasal Expressions : Lesson 22 (English)
  -Read the following and test your understanding by taking the quiz below
 
To stop by: to visit or stop somewhere briefly (also: to drop by, to drop in on). ‘To drop by’ and ‘to drop in on’ are used for visits that are unplanned or unexpected.
   
To drop (someone) a line: to write a note to someone.
   
To give (someone) a call: to telephone.
   
To come across: to meet or find unexpectedly (also: to run across); to be perceived or judged as (also: to come off).
   
To cross one’s mind: to come to one’s thoughts unexpectedly or briefly, to occur to one.
   
To stand for: to represent, to signify; to tolerate. The second definition is usually used in a negative sense. The meaning is the same as ‘to put up with’ in Lesson 19.
   
To stand a chance: to have the possibilty of accomplishing something. This idiom is often used with an adjective such as ‘good’ or ‘excellent’. It also occurs in the negative, sometimes with the adjective ‘much’.
   
To look on: to watch as a spectator, to observe.
   
To look up to: to admire, to respect greatly.
   
To look down on: to feel superior, to think of someone as less important.
   
To take off: to leave the ground (for airplanes); to leave, often in a hurry. The noun form ‘takeoff’ derives from this idiom.
   
To pull off: to succeed in doing something difficult; to exit to the side of a road (also: to pull over).
   
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