Phrasal Verbs: Transitive and Intransitive, Separable and Inseparable
Updated on January 30, 2026
Learn A2 level phrasal verbs with clear examples. Understand transitive, intransitive, separable and inseparable forms with easy explanations and practice.
Exercises & Summary
Phrasal Verbs: Transitive and Intransitive – Exercises
Phrasal verbs are verbs that are put together with small words like up, on, off, or in. In combination, they give a new meaning. For instance, “turn on” means to start something, and “look after” means to take care of someone.
Examples:
- look at
- turn on
- get up
- give up
These little words change the verb’s meaning a lot!
Two Large Groups
1. Phrasal Verbs That Are Transitive and Intransitive
- Transitive = needs an object (a noun or pronoun after the verb)
Example:
I turned on the light. (light = object)
Incorrect: I turned on. (wrong – no object) - Intransitive = does NOT need an object
Example:
I wake up at 7 o’clock.
Incorrect: I wake up. (correct – no object needed)
Easy trick:
If you can say “What?” or “Who?” after the verb, it’s transitive.
2. Separable and Inseparable Phrasal Verbs
(Only transitive phrasal verbs can be separable or inseparable)
- Separable = you can put the object between the verb and the particle
Example: turn on
I turned the TV on.
I turned on the TV.
Both are correct! With a pronoun (it, them, him, her…), you MUST separate:
✓ I turned it on.
✗ I turned on it. - Inseparable = the verb and particle must stay together
Example: look after (take care of)
She looks after her baby sister.
✓ She looks after her.
✗ She looks her after. (wrong)
Very Common Examples
You can separate them:
- turn on / turn off
- pick up
- put on (clothes)
- take off (clothes)
- write down
- throw away
Inseparable (keep them together):
- look after
- run into (meet by chance)
- get on (bus, train)
- look for (search)
- care about
Intransitive (no object):
- get up
- sit down
- stand up
- go out
- wake up
- grow up