Q3 of 35 Page 55

Here are a few more idiomatic expressions that occur in the text. Try to use them in sentences of your own.

(i) Caught my eye


(ii) He’d had enough


(iii) Laugh ourselves silly


(iv) Can’t bring myself to

(i) caught my eye:


Meaning- to grab attention.
Example: All of a sudden, the beautiful view of the valley caught my eye.


(ii) He’d had enough:


Meaning- enough of something in particular.
Example: I have had enough before I joined the job.


(iii) Laugh ourselves silly:


Meaning- laugh for a long period of time.
Example: On the sight of a joker in the circus, we laughed ourselves silly.


(iv) Can’t bring myself to:


Meaning - The inability to do something that seems unpleasant.
Example: I can’t bring myself to speak about medicines.


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Phrasal verbs

A phrasal verb is a verb followed by a preposition or an adverb. Its meaning is often different from the meaning of its parts.


Compare the meanings of the verbs gets on and run away in (a) and (b) below. You can easily guess their meanings in (a) but in (b) they have special meanings.


(a) She got on at Agra when the bus stopped for breakfast.


Dev Anand ran away from home when he was a teenager.


In (a) i.e. the first sentence, she got on refers to the movement of a person


Whereas


In the second sentence, it says that Dev Anand ran away i.e. left his house


(b) She’s eager to get on in life. (Succeed)


The visitors ran away with the match. (Won easily)


In (b) i.e. the first sentence, it refers to climbing the ladder of success


Whereas


In the second sentence, it refers to winning the match (ran away with the match)


Some phrasal verbs have three parts: a verb followed by an adverb and a preposition. For Example:


(c) Our car ran out of petrol just outside the city limits.


(d) The government wants to reach out to the people with this new campaign.


B. Now find the sentences in the lesson that have the phrasal verbs given below. Match them with their meanings. (you have already found out the meanings of some of them.) Are their meanings the same as that of their parts? (Note that two parts of the phrasal verb may occur separated in the text.)








































(i) plunge in



Speak or write without focus



(ii) kept back



Stay indoors



(iii) move up



Make (them) remain quite



(iv) ramble on



Have a good relationship with



(v) get along with



Give an assignment (homework) to a person in authority (the teacher)



(vi) calm down



Compensate



(vii) stay in



Go straight to the topic



(viii) make up for



Go to the next grade



(ix) hand in



Not promoted


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Idioms

Idioms are groups of words with a fixed order, and a particular meaning different from the meanings of each of their words put together. (Phrasal verbs can also be idioms; they are said to be ‘idiomatic’ when their meanings are unpredictable). For example, do you know what it means to meet one’s match in English? It makes to meet someone who is as good as oneself, or even better, in some skill or quality. Do you know what it means to let the cat out of the bag? Can you guess?


A. Here are a few sentences from the text which have idiomatic expressions. Can you say what each means? (You might want to consult a dictionary first.)


(i) Our entire class is quaking in its boots.


…………………………………………………………..


(ii) Until then, we keep telling each other not to lose heart.


…………………………………………………………….


(iii) Mr. Keesing was annoyed with me for ages because I talked so much.


…………………………………………………………………..


(iv) Mr. Keesing was trying to play a joke on me with this ridiculous subject, but I’d make sure the joke was on him.


…………………………………………………………………..

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Do you know how to use a dictionary to find out the meanings or idiomatic expressions? Take, for example, the expressions caught my eye in the story. Where-under which word-would you look for it in the dictionary?

Look for it under the first word. But if the first word is a ‘grammatically’ word like a, the, for, etc., then take the next word. That is, look for the first ‘meaningful’ word in the expression. In our example, it is the word caught.


But you wouldn’t find caught in the dictionary because it is the past tense of catch. You’ll find caught listed under catch. So you must look catch for the expressions caught my eye. Which other expressions with catch are listed below in your dictionary?


Note that a dictionary entry usually first give the meanings of the word itself, and then gives a list of idiomatic expressions using that word. For example, study this partial entry for the noun ‘eye’ from the Oxford Advanced Learner’s Dictionary, 2005.


Eye


Noun


Part of the body, either of the two organs of the face that you see with: The suspect has dark hair and green eyes.


Ability to see: A surgeon needs a good eye and a steady hand.


The way of seeing -a particular way of seeing: He looked at the design with the eye of an engineer.


You have read the expressions ‘not to lose heart’ in this text. Now find out the meanings of the following expressions using the word ‘heart’. Use each of them in a sentence of your own.


1. Break somebody’s heart


2. Close/dear to heart


3. From the (bottom of your) heart.


4. Have a heart


5. Have a heart of stone


6. Your heart goes out to somebody.

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Contracted forms

When we speak, we use ‘contracted forms’ or short forms such as these:


Can’t (for can not or cannot)


I’d (for I would or I had)


She’s (for she is)


Notice that contracted forms are also written with an apostrophe to show a shortening of a spelling of not, would, or is as in the above example. Writing a diary is like speaking to oneself. Plays (often novels) also have speech in written form. So, we usually come across contracted forms in diaries, plays, and novels.


1. Make a list of the contracted forms in the text. Rewrite them in full forms of two words. For Example, I’ve = I have


2. We have seen that some contracted forms can stand for two different full forms:


For Example, I’d = I had or I would


There can be many such shorts forms i.e. contracted forms to shorten sentences. We often use such contractions in our daily life as well.


Find in the text the contracted forms that stand for two different full forms, and say what these are.