Word order in separable phrasal verbs (take on me, take me on?!)
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Description
In this episode I make use of the song 'Take on me' by the 80's Norwegian band a-ha to explain the rule of word order in separable phrasal verbs.  *I do not own the rights to this song, and the segment of the song played in this episode is for educational purposes only.* Rule:  With separable phrasal verbs, if the direct object is a pronoun ( me, you, I we, etc) it has to go in the middle of the phrasal verb. That is, it has to be separate.  TAKE ON-  transitive Transitive- take on something. To accept some work or responsibility- Together- “ She is really taking on a lot at work these days. “ “Working mothers take on a lot.” 2. Transitive and Separable-  to fight or compete against someone (similar if you imagine it as accepting some work, the work of fighting someone.) Often used for competitive or sporting events. Together- “ The Chicago Bulls will take on the Mets next Saturday.” Separate- “ Our team will take them on!”  (less common) Useful links- Stay up to date and follow me on Instagram @english.for.introverts  .  (I changed my username from what I said in the episode!) Macmillan Dictionary- take on:  https://www.macmillandictionary.com/dictionary/british/take-on Introverted Language Learner private Facebook community: https://form.jotform.com/alyssapoco/facebook-group Espresso English- summary of phrasal verbs! : https://www.espressoenglish.net/phrasal-verbs-in-english/ Youtube- a-ha Take on me video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=djV11Xbc914 Lyrics to 'Take on me': https://genius.com/A-ha-take-on-me-lyrics  Separable phrasal verb practice worksheet from Cambridge: https://www.cambridge.org/grammarandbeyond/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/PhrasalVerbsDownloadable.pdf --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/phrasalverbs/support
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