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10 English Phrasal
Verbs About Socializing

English Phrasal Verbs about Socializin…

Phrasal Verbs in Conversation Course

Ask (Someone) Over


If you ask someone over, you invite the person to your
house or apartment:

! “My roommates and I are going to ask our English


teacher over for lunch.”

Ask (Someone) Out


If you ask someone out, you invite the person to go out for a
romantic encounter:

! “Bill asked me out, but I turned him down (said no).


He’s just not my type.”

Come Over
When a person comes over, they arrive at your house or
apartment:

! “Why don’t you come over to my place after class? We


can work on the project together.”

Bring Over
To bring something over is to bring an object to the other
person’s house or apartment:

! “I’ll bring over my DVD collection so that we can watch


some movies.”

Have (Someone) Over


Have over is the general word for having people visit your
house/apartment:

! “We’re having about 15 people over for Thanksgiving


dinner.”

Pop In / Stop In / Stop By


These phrasal verbs mean to enter a place for a short period
of time:

! “I just stopped by to say hi – I need to go in about ten


minutes.”

Drop In
Drop in means to visit unexpectedly:

! “My sister always drops in while I’m in the middle of


doing something important. I wish she’d call me before
she came over.”

Drop (Someone) Off


Drop off is when you take somebody in your car and then
leave them in another place:

! “I’m going to drop my husband off at the airport. He’s


traveling to London.”

Pick (Someone) Up
Pick up is the opposite of “drop off.” If you pick someone up,
you go and drive to a place and someone gets into your car.
Remember that you drop someone off at a place, and you
pick someone up from a place.

! “My husband returns from London on Thursday – I’ll


pick him up from the airport around noon.”

Meet Up With (Someone)


To meet up with someone is to get together at a particular
time and place:

! “I’m going to meet up with some friends at the bar at


8:30.”

Bonus Idiom: “Take A Rain Check”

! “We’re going to play basketball tomorrow afternoon. Do


you want to join us?”

“I’ll have to take a rain check – my boyfriend and I are


going to see a concert. Maybe another time!”

“I’ll take a rain check” is a response to a social invitation if


you can’t go, but you hope the person asks you again in the
future.

Learn Phrasal Verbs Naturally

Learn more about the Phrasal Verbs


Course

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