Important Lessons for Your Exam

Every Man in His Humour – Full Detailed Summary | Act Wise-Narrative

Image
  Every Man in His Humour – Full Detailed Narrative Prologue The play begins with a direct address to the audience. The prologue explains Ben Jonson’s goals: this is not a play filled with fantastical absurdities or adventures in far-off lands. Instead, it will be realistic, showing contemporary people of Elizabethan London and their “humours”—exaggerated personality traits stemming from the old theory of the four bodily fluids (blood, phlegm, yellow bile, black bile), believed to shape temperament. Jonson promises that through familiar “deeds and language,” audiences will laugh at human follies and recognize their own faults. Act I – Letters, Introductions, Deceptions At his London home,  Old Knowell , a scholar, speaks with his witty servant  Brainworm  and asks him to call his son  Edward Knowell . Knowell, once a scholar himself, is glad to see Edward educated, but he disapproves of his fascination with poetry and “lighter arts.” Soon,  Master Stephen ,...

Phrasal Verbs || 50 Important Phrasal Verbs for Your Exam || Part-1

Phrasal Verbs are not only important for your exams but also for your spoken. Your speech gets better and impressive if you learn phrasal verbs and use them in your speech. We are starting a new series of phrasal verbs where you will get four parts of phrasal verbs each containing 50 phrasal verbs. Read and learn first 50. 

All  Parts- Phrasal Verbs

Part-1

Part-2

Part-3

Part-4

Important Phrasal Verbs for TGT PGT DSSSB


50 Important Phrasal Verbs- Part 1


1. fill something out -
to write information in blanks, as on a form

2. fill something up - fill to the top

3. find out - discover

4. find something out - discover

5. get something across/ over - communicate, make understandable

6. get along/on - like each other

7. get around - have mobility

8. get away - go on a vacation

9. get away with something - do without being noticed or punished

10. get back - return

11. get something back - receive something you had before

12. get back at somebody - retaliate, take revenge

13. take after somebody - resemble a family member

14. take something apart - purposely break into pieces

15. take something back - return an item

16. take off - start to fly

17. take something off - remove something (usually clothing)

18. take something out - remove from a place or thing

19. take somebody out - pay for somebody to go somewhere with you

20. tear something up - rip into pieces 


Also Read:



List of Deaths in Hamlet || All Deaths in Hamlet by Shakespeare



21. think back - remember (often + to, sometimes + on)  

22. think something over - consider

23. throw something away - dispose of

24. turn something down - decrease the volume or strength (heat, light etc)

25. turn something down - refuse

26. turn something off - stop the energy flow, switch off

27. turn something on - start the energy, switch on

28. turn something up - increase the volume or strength (heat, light etc)

29. turn up - appear suddenly

30. try something on - sample clothing

31. try something out - test

32. use something up - finish the supply

33. wake up - stop sleeping

34. warm somebody/ something up - increase the temperature

35. warm up - prepare body for exercise

36. wear off - fade away

37. work out - exercise

38. work out - be successful

39. work something out - make a calculation

40. ask somebody out - invite on a date

41. ask around - ask many people the same question

42. add up to something - equal

43. back something up - reverse

44. back somebody up - support

45. blow up - explode

46. blow something up - add air

47. break down - stop functioning (vehicle, machine)

48. break down - get upset

49. break something down - divide into smaller parts

50. break in - force entry to a building

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

UP Lt-Grade English Syllabus

DSSSB TGT English Syllabus 2024 | New Syllabus for DSSSB TGT ENGLISH

Gun Powder Plot in Macbeth | Is Macbeth Inspired By Gun Powder Plot?

"Exploring Galsworthy's Masterpiece: Must-Know MCQs on The Forsyte Saga"

Important Proverbs for UPTGT/PGT English || UPTGT/PGT 2023

Is Samson Agonistes a Classical Tragedy or Classical Tragicomedy? John Milton

Top 10 Tips to Crack UGC NET English Exam on First Attempt

Online Live Batch for Lt Grade by Orator Institute