B2 · Upper-Intermediate

B2 English Phrasal Verbs

180 upper-intermediate phrasal verbs across 18 categories — nuanced, idiomatic and exam-ready expressions for confident, near-native English.

Business & Deals 10

  1. follow upphrasal verb

    To pursue something further to get a result.

    “We’ll follow up on your enquiry within a week.”

    Synonyms: pursue, chase up

  2. buy outphrasal verb

    To purchase a controlling share of a company.

    “They bought out their main competitor last year.”

    Synonyms: take over, acquire

  3. enter intophrasal verb

    To begin a formal agreement.

    “The two firms entered into a long-term contract.”

    Synonyms: embark on, undertake

  4. hammer outphrasal verb

    To reach an agreement after hard discussion.

    “After hours of talks they hammered out a deal.”

    Synonyms: negotiate, thrash out

  5. push throughphrasal verb

    To get something accepted despite opposition.

    “Management pushed through the controversial merger.”

    Synonyms: force through

  6. back out ofphrasal verb

    To withdraw from an agreement.

    “He backed out of the deal at the last minute.”

    Synonyms: pull out of

  7. carry throughphrasal verb

    To complete something successfully.

    “They carried the ambitious plan through to the end.”

    Synonyms: see through, complete

  8. close downphrasal verb

    To stop a business from operating.

    “The local branch closed down in the recession.”

    Synonyms: shut down, wind up

  9. scale upphrasal verb

    To increase the size of an operation.

    “They scaled up production to meet demand.”

    Synonyms: expand, ramp up

  10. roll outphrasal verb

    To introduce a product or service gradually.

    “The firm rolled out the new app across Europe.”

    Synonyms: launch, release

Ambition & Success 10

  1. start outphrasal verb

    To begin a career or activity.

    “She started out as a junior reporter.”

    Synonyms: set out, begin

  2. forge aheadphrasal verb

    To make progress in a determined way.

    “The company forged ahead despite the doubts.”

    Synonyms: press on, advance

  3. come intophrasal verb

    To gain money, fame or property.

    “She came into a small fortune when she turned thirty.”

    Synonyms: inherit, acquire

  4. rise abovephrasal verb

    To deal well with a difficult situation.

    “She rose above the constant criticism.”

    Synonyms: transcend, overcome

  5. cash in onphrasal verb

    To get an advantage from a situation.

    “They cashed in on the sudden demand for masks.”

    Synonyms: capitalise on, exploit

  6. break intophrasal verb

    To become involved in a new area or market.

    “It is hard to break into the film industry.”

    Synonyms: enter, penetrate

  7. shoot upphrasal verb

    To increase very quickly.

    “House prices shot up over the summer.”

    Synonyms: soar, rocket

  8. churn outphrasal verb

    To produce large amounts quickly.

    “The studio churns out blockbusters every year.”

    Synonyms: mass-produce, crank out

  9. stand outphrasal verb

    To be clearly better or more noticeable.

    “Her thesis really stands out from the rest.”

    Synonyms: shine, excel

  10. pull aheadphrasal verb

    To move into a leading position.

    “Our team pulled ahead in the final minutes.”

    Synonyms: take the lead

Crisis & Setbacks 10

  1. blow upphrasal verb

    To become very angry or to explode.

    “The whole argument blew up over nothing.”

    Synonyms: erupt, lose it

  2. fall apartphrasal verb

    To break into pieces or completely fail.

    “Their carefully laid plans soon fell apart.”

    Synonyms: collapse, disintegrate

  3. break downphrasal verb

    To stop working or functioning.

    “The old car broke down on the motorway.”

    Synonyms: fail, pack up

  4. give wayphrasal verb

    To collapse under pressure or weight.

    “The old wooden bridge gave way under the lorry.”

    Synonyms: cave in, collapse

  5. go underphrasal verb

    To fail or go bankrupt.

    “Hundreds of small firms went under that year.”

    Synonyms: fold, sink

  6. cave inphrasal verb

    To collapse inwards or suddenly give up.

    “The tunnel roof caved in after the explosion.”

    Synonyms: collapse, yield

  7. back upphrasal verb

    To form a queue or accumulate.

    “Traffic backed up for miles after the crash.”

    Synonyms: pile up, build up

  8. boil down tophrasal verb

    To be, in essence, a particular thing.

    “It all boils down to a lack of money.”

    Synonyms: amount to, come down to

  9. flare upphrasal verb

    To suddenly become worse or more intense.

    “Old tensions flared up between the two groups.”

    Synonyms: erupt, intensify

  10. crop upphrasal verb

    To appear or happen unexpectedly.

    “Unexpected problems kept cropping up.”

    Synonyms: arise, come up

Argument & Persuasion 10

  1. talk intophrasal verb

    To persuade someone to do something.

    “She talked me into joining the choir.”

    Synonyms: persuade, convince

  2. talk out ofphrasal verb

    To persuade someone not to do something.

    “He talked me out of quitting my job.”

    Synonyms: dissuade

  3. win overphrasal verb

    To gain someone’s support or approval.

    “Her honesty soon won over the doubters.”

    Synonyms: persuade, convert

  4. lay outphrasal verb

    To explain something clearly and in order.

    “He laid out his argument point by point.”

    Synonyms: set out, present

  5. bear outphrasal verb

    To confirm that something is true.

    “The new figures bear out her theory.”

    Synonyms: confirm, support

  6. point tophrasal verb

    To suggest that something is true.

    “All the evidence points to human error.”

    Synonyms: indicate, suggest

  7. shoot downphrasal verb

    To reject an idea or argument firmly.

    “They shot down my proposal without discussion.”

    Synonyms: reject, dismiss

  8. play downphrasal verb

    To make something seem less important.

    “The minister played down the seriousness of the leak.”

    Synonyms: downplay, minimise

  9. gloss overphrasal verb

    To avoid discussing something fully.

    “She glossed over the weak points in her plan.”

    Synonyms: skate over, brush over

  10. drum upphrasal verb

    To try hard to get support or interest.

    “They drummed up support for the campaign.”

    Synonyms: rally, generate

Strong Emotions 10

  1. well upphrasal verb

    To rise, as tears in the eyes.

    “Tears welled up in her eyes at the news.”

    Synonyms: brim, fill

  2. choke upphrasal verb

    To become too emotional to speak.

    “He choked up halfway through the speech.”

    Synonyms: get choked

  3. boil overphrasal verb

    To burst out as anger or excitement.

    “His frustration finally boiled over.”

    Synonyms: erupt, explode

  4. flip outphrasal verb

    To suddenly lose control with emotion.

    “She flipped out when she saw the mess.”

    Synonyms: freak out, lose it

  5. simmer downphrasal verb

    To gradually become calm after anger.

    “It took him an hour to simmer down.”

    Synonyms: cool down, calm down

  6. tense upphrasal verb

    To become tense and stiff.

    “I always tense up before a big exam.”

    Synonyms: stiffen, tighten

  7. freeze upphrasal verb

    To become unable to act or speak.

    “He froze up completely during the interview.”

    Synonyms: seize up, panic

  8. clam upphrasal verb

    To suddenly stop talking.

    “She clams up whenever she feels nervous.”

    Synonyms: shut down, go quiet

  9. hold backphrasal verb

    To stop yourself showing a feeling.

    “He could barely hold back his tears.”

    Synonyms: restrain, suppress

  10. give way tophrasal verb

    To be replaced by another feeling.

    “Her relief soon gave way to anger.”

    Synonyms: yield to, turn to

Social Dynamics 10

  1. warm tophrasal verb

    To begin to like someone or something.

    “I warmed to her the moment we met.”

    Synonyms: take to, grow fond of

  2. fall out withphrasal verb

    To have an argument and stop being friends.

    “She fell out with her closest colleague.”

    Synonyms: quarrel with

  3. suck up tophrasal verb

    To flatter someone to gain favour.

    “He’s always sucking up to the manager.”

    Synonyms: flatter, grovel to

  4. talk down tophrasal verb

    To speak to someone as if they were stupid.

    “I hate the way he talks down to people.”

    Synonyms: patronise

  5. single outphrasal verb

    To choose one person for special attention.

    “She was singled out for special praise.”

    Synonyms: pick out, select

  6. leave outphrasal verb

    To not include someone or something.

    “They left him out of the team again.”

    Synonyms: exclude, omit

  7. butter upphrasal verb

    To flatter someone so they help you.

    “He buttered up the boss before asking for leave.”

    Synonyms: sweet-talk, flatter

  8. drift apartphrasal verb

    To gradually become less close.

    “The old friends slowly drifted apart.”

    Synonyms: grow apart

  9. team upphrasal verb

    To join with someone to work together.

    “We teamed up with a rival firm on the project.”

    Synonyms: join forces, partner

  10. fall in withphrasal verb

    To become friendly with a group.

    “He fell in with a bad crowd at university.”

    Synonyms: take up with

Thought & Reflection 10

  1. dwell onphrasal verb

    To think or talk too long about something.

    “Try not to dwell on your past mistakes.”

    Synonyms: brood on, linger on

  2. reflect onphrasal verb

    To think carefully about something.

    “She reflected on the choices she had made.”

    Synonyms: ponder, contemplate

  3. toy withphrasal verb

    To consider an idea without commitment.

    “I toyed with the idea of moving abroad.”

    Synonyms: flirt with, play with

  4. hit uponphrasal verb

    To suddenly think of an idea.

    “She hit upon a brilliant solution in the shower.”

    Synonyms: stumble on, chance on

  5. puzzle overphrasal verb

    To think hard in order to understand.

    “He puzzled over the strange message for hours.”

    Synonyms: ponder, wrestle with

  6. think backphrasal verb

    To remember something from the past.

    “Think back to your very first day at school.”

    Synonyms: recall, look back

  7. dawn onphrasal verb

    To gradually become clear to someone.

    “It slowly dawned on me that I was lost.”

    Synonyms: occur to, register

  8. zone outphrasal verb

    To stop paying attention to surroundings.

    “I zoned out completely during the lecture.”

    Synonyms: switch off, drift

  9. switch offphrasal verb

    To stop concentrating or worrying.

    “I find it hard to switch off after work.”

    Synonyms: tune out, unwind

  10. sink inphrasal verb

    To be fully understood or realised.

    “The terrible news took a while to sink in.”

    Synonyms: register, take hold

Conduct & Reputation 10

  1. live downphrasal verb

    To make people forget about a mistake.

    “He never quite lived down that embarrassing speech.”

    Synonyms: outlive, escape

  2. answer forphrasal verb

    To take responsibility for something.

    “One day they will answer for their actions.”

    Synonyms: account for

  3. get away withphrasal verb

    To avoid being punished for something.

    “Somehow he got away with handing it in late.”

    Synonyms: escape blame for

  4. look down onphrasal verb

    To regard someone as inferior.

    “She has never looked down on anyone.”

    Synonyms: disdain, scorn

  5. play upphrasal verb

    To make something seem more important.

    “He played up his small role in the success.”

    Synonyms: exaggerate, overstate

  6. cover upphrasal verb

    To hide a mistake or crime.

    “The company tried to cover up the safety failures.”

    Synonyms: conceal, hush up

  7. stand up forphrasal verb

    To defend someone or something.

    “You must learn to stand up for yourself.”

    Synonyms: defend, champion

  8. talk backphrasal verb

    To reply rudely to someone in authority.

    “The pupil was punished for talking back to the teacher.”

    Synonyms: answer back

  9. rein inphrasal verb

    To bring under control.

    “He struggled to rein in his temper.”

    Synonyms: restrain, curb

  10. sail throughphrasal verb

    To succeed in something with ease.

    “She sailed through her final exams.”

    Synonyms: breeze through

Finance & Risk 10

  1. bank onphrasal verb

    To rely on something happening.

    “Don’t bank on getting a bonus this year.”

    Synonyms: count on, depend on

  2. cash inphrasal verb

    To exchange something for money.

    “She cashed in her shares before the crash.”

    Synonyms: redeem, sell

  3. plough intophrasal verb

    To invest a lot of money in something.

    “They ploughed millions into the new factory.”

    Synonyms: pour into, sink into

  4. write offphrasal verb

    To accept that money or a debt is lost.

    “The bank wrote off the unpayable debt.”

    Synonyms: cancel, discount

  5. rake inphrasal verb

    To earn a large amount of money.

    “The blockbuster raked in millions worldwide.”

    Synonyms: pull in, net

  6. shell outphrasal verb

    To pay a lot of money, often unwillingly.

    “I shelled out a fortune on the repairs.”

    Synonyms: fork out, splash out

  7. squirrel awayphrasal verb

    To save something secretly for later.

    “She had squirrelled away a tidy sum.”

    Synonyms: stash, hoard

  8. max outphrasal verb

    To use something to its absolute limit.

    “He maxed out three credit cards on holiday.”

    Synonyms: exhaust

  9. bail outphrasal verb

    To rescue someone from financial trouble.

    “The government bailed out the failing bank.”

    Synonyms: rescue, prop up

  10. tide overphrasal verb

    To help someone through a difficult period.

    “This loan should tide us over until payday.”

    Synonyms: see through, carry

Transformation 10

  1. usher inphrasal verb

    To mark the start of a new period.

    “The election ushered in a wave of reform.”

    Synonyms: herald, introduce

  2. give rise tophrasal verb

    To cause something to happen.

    “The decision gave rise to fierce protests.”

    Synonyms: produce, trigger

  3. evolve intophrasal verb

    To develop gradually into something.

    “The small blog evolved into a global brand.”

    Synonyms: turn into, grow into

  4. phase outphrasal verb

    To stop using something gradually.

    “They are phasing out petrol cars by 2035.”

    Synonyms: withdraw, retire

  5. phase inphrasal verb

    To introduce something gradually.

    “The new rules will be phased in over a year.”

    Synonyms: bring in, roll out

  6. do away withphrasal verb

    To get rid of or abolish something.

    “They did away with the outdated entrance fee.”

    Synonyms: abolish, scrap

  7. branch offphrasal verb

    To divide and go in a new direction.

    “The main path branches off near the river.”

    Synonyms: diverge, split off

  8. tail offphrasal verb

    To gradually decrease or weaken.

    “Sales tailed off sharply after Christmas.”

    Synonyms: dwindle, peter out

  9. level offphrasal verb

    To stop rising or falling and stay steady.

    “Prices finally levelled off this spring.”

    Synonyms: stabilise, plateau

  10. set offphrasal verb

    To cause something to start suddenly.

    “A single spark set off the chain reaction.”

    Synonyms: trigger, spark

Confrontation 10

  1. square up tophrasal verb

    To face a difficult situation bravely.

    “He finally squared up to his responsibilities.”

    Synonyms: face up to, confront

  2. round onphrasal verb

    To suddenly attack or criticise someone.

    “She rounded on her critics at the meeting.”

    Synonyms: turn on, lash at

  3. crack down onphrasal verb

    To deal more strictly with something.

    “Police are cracking down on speeding drivers.”

    Synonyms: get tough on

  4. clamp down onphrasal verb

    To act firmly to stop something.

    “The city clamped down on illegal parking.”

    Synonyms: stamp out, suppress

  5. hit out atphrasal verb

    To criticise someone or something strongly.

    “The author hit out at her harshest reviewers.”

    Synonyms: attack, denounce

  6. set uponphrasal verb

    To attack someone suddenly.

    “He was set upon by three masked men.”

    Synonyms: attack, assail

  7. rise upphrasal verb

    To rebel against authority.

    “The people rose up against the dictator.”

    Synonyms: revolt, rebel

  8. face up tophrasal verb

    To accept and deal with a difficulty.

    “You must face up to the consequences.”

    Synonyms: confront, own

  9. dig inphrasal verb

    To refuse to change your position.

    “Both sides dug in and refused to compromise.”

    Synonyms: stand firm, hold firm

  10. hold outphrasal verb

    To resist or survive in a tough situation.

    “The defenders held out against the siege.”

    Synonyms: hold firm, last

Wellbeing & Recovery 10

  1. come roundphrasal verb

    To become conscious again.

    “She slowly came round after fainting.”

    Synonyms: come to, revive

  2. pull throughphrasal verb

    To survive a serious illness or crisis.

    “The doctors were sure he would pull through.”

    Synonyms: recover, survive

  3. shake offphrasal verb

    To get rid of an illness or feeling.

    “I just can’t shake off this nasty cough.”

    Synonyms: get over, throw off

  4. act upphrasal verb

    To cause pain or trouble again.

    “My old knee injury is acting up again.”

    Synonyms: play up, flare up

  5. waste awayphrasal verb

    To become very thin and weak.

    “He wasted away during the long illness.”

    Synonyms: wither, decline

  6. bounce backphrasal verb

    To recover quickly after a setback.

    “She bounced back within days of the surgery.”

    Synonyms: rebound, recover

  7. go down withphrasal verb

    To become ill with a particular disease.

    “Half the class went down with the flu.”

    Synonyms: catch, come down with

  8. ease offphrasal verb

    To become less severe.

    “The pain in my back eased off by evening.”

    Synonyms: let up, subside

  9. fight offphrasal verb

    To resist an illness or attacker.

    “Vitamin C may help you fight off a cold.”

    Synonyms: ward off, resist

  10. seize upphrasal verb

    To stop moving and become stiff.

    “My back seized up halfway through the run.”

    Synonyms: stiffen, lock up

Workplace 10

  1. step inphrasal verb

    To become involved to help in a situation.

    “The manager stepped in to settle the dispute.”

    Synonyms: intervene, help out

  2. stand inphrasal verb

    To do someone’s job temporarily.

    “She stood in for the chairman at the meeting.”

    Synonyms: fill in, cover

  3. sign upphrasal verb

    To agree formally to do something.

    “I signed up for the management course.”

    Synonyms: enrol, register

  4. clock offphrasal verb

    To record that you are leaving work.

    “We usually clock off at five thirty.”

    Synonyms: finish, knock off

  5. knock offphrasal verb

    To stop work for the day.

    “Let’s knock off early on Friday.”

    Synonyms: finish up, call it a day

  6. call inphrasal verb

    To telephone your workplace.

    “He called in sick for the third time this month.”

    Synonyms: phone in

  7. farm outphrasal verb

    To give work to others to do.

    “They farmed out the design work to a studio.”

    Synonyms: outsource, delegate

  8. snow underphrasal verb

    To overwhelm someone with work.

    “I’m completely snowed under this week.”

    Synonyms: swamp, overwhelm

  9. rope inphrasal verb

    To persuade someone to help.

    “She roped me in to help with the accounts.”

    Synonyms: enlist, draft in

  10. see tophrasal verb

    To deal with or take care of something.

    “I’ll see to the booking first thing tomorrow.”

    Synonyms: attend to, handle

Discourse & Debate 10

  1. touch onphrasal verb

    To mention something briefly.

    “The report only touches on the wider issues.”

    Synonyms: mention, allude to

  2. expand onphrasal verb

    To give more detail about something.

    “Could you expand on that last point?”

    Synonyms: elaborate on

  3. harp onphrasal verb

    To keep talking about the same thing.

    “He keeps harping on about the good old days.”

    Synonyms: go on about, dwell on

  4. cut inphrasal verb

    To interrupt a conversation.

    “She cut in before I could finish my sentence.”

    Synonyms: butt in, interrupt

  5. chime inphrasal verb

    To add a comment to a conversation.

    “Several people chimed in with their views.”

    Synonyms: join in, interject

  6. put acrossphrasal verb

    To express ideas so they are understood.

    “He put his argument across with great clarity.”

    Synonyms: get across, convey

  7. rattle onphrasal verb

    To talk for a long time about little.

    “He rattled on for an hour about his holiday.”

    Synonyms: ramble, prattle

  8. trail offphrasal verb

    To gradually become quieter and stop.

    “Her voice trailed off into silence.”

    Synonyms: fade out, peter out

  9. shout downphrasal verb

    To stop someone being heard by shouting.

    “Protesters shouted down the visiting minister.”

    Synonyms: drown out, silence

  10. sound offphrasal verb

    To express strong opinions loudly.

    “He loves to sound off about modern politics.”

    Synonyms: hold forth, rant

Strategy & Execution 10

  1. lay downphrasal verb

    To establish a rule or principle firmly.

    “The committee laid down strict new guidelines.”

    Synonyms: set down, establish

  2. embark onphrasal verb

    To begin an important project.

    “The team embarked on an ambitious new project.”

    Synonyms: set out on, launch into

  3. press ahead withphrasal verb

    To continue with a plan despite difficulty.

    “They pressed ahead with the reforms anyway.”

    Synonyms: push on with

  4. see throughphrasal verb

    To continue with something until it is finished.

    “She was determined to see the project through.”

    Synonyms: complete, finish

  5. fall back onphrasal verb

    To use something when other plans fail.

    “If the deal collapses, we can fall back on savings.”

    Synonyms: resort to, turn to

  6. factor inphrasal verb

    To include something when making a decision.

    “You must factor in the cost of delivery.”

    Synonyms: take into account

  7. zero in onphrasal verb

    To focus all attention on something.

    “Investigators zeroed in on a single suspect.”

    Synonyms: home in on, focus on

  8. firm upphrasal verb

    To make a plan more definite.

    “Let’s firm up the arrangements this week.”

    Synonyms: finalise, nail down

  9. flesh outphrasal verb

    To add more detail to something.

    “We need to flesh out the rough proposal.”

    Synonyms: expand, develop

  10. thrash outphrasal verb

    To discuss thoroughly to reach a decision.

    “The committee thrashed out a compromise.”

    Synonyms: hammer out, resolve

Power & Control 10

  1. preside overphrasal verb

    To be in charge of an organisation or event.

    “She presides over the largest charity in the region.”

    Synonyms: chair, oversee

  2. rule overphrasal verb

    To govern or control a place or people.

    “The dynasty ruled over the empire for centuries.”

    Synonyms: govern, reign over

  3. answer tophrasal verb

    To be under someone’s authority.

    “As director, she answers only to the board.”

    Synonyms: report to

  4. bow tophrasal verb

    To give in to pressure or authority.

    “The council finally bowed to public pressure.”

    Synonyms: yield to, submit to

  5. stamp outphrasal verb

    To put an end to something completely.

    “The new law aims to stamp out corruption.”

    Synonyms: eradicate, wipe out

  6. keep downphrasal verb

    To prevent a group from gaining power.

    “The regime kept the people down for decades.”

    Synonyms: suppress, hold back

  7. tighten upphrasal verb

    To make rules or control stricter.

    “They tightened up security after the breach.”

    Synonyms: toughen, strengthen

  8. step asidephrasal verb

    To give up a position for someone else.

    “The chairman stepped aside for a younger leader.”

    Synonyms: stand down, make way

  9. muscle in onphrasal verb

    To force your way into something for gain.

    “New firms muscled in on the lucrative market.”

    Synonyms: barge in on

  10. lock downphrasal verb

    To impose strict control over a place.

    “Authorities locked down the city after the alert.”

    Synonyms: seal off, secure

Truth & Deception 10

  1. hush upphrasal verb

    To prevent something from becoming public.

    “They tried to hush up the embarrassing scandal.”

    Synonyms: cover up, suppress

  2. let slipphrasal verb

    To reveal something by accident.

    “She accidentally let slip the surprise.”

    Synonyms: blurt out, give away

  3. come cleanphrasal verb

    To admit the truth about something.

    “He finally came clean about the missing money.”

    Synonyms: confess, own up

  4. catch outphrasal verb

    To trick or expose someone in a mistake.

    “The tricky question caught several candidates out.”

    Synonyms: trip up, expose

  5. make upphrasal verb

    To invent a story or excuse.

    “He made up a feeble excuse for being late.”

    Synonyms: fabricate, invent

  6. tip offphrasal verb

    To secretly warn or inform someone.

    “An insider tipped off the journalists.”

    Synonyms: alert, inform

  7. cover forphrasal verb

    To hide someone’s wrongdoing.

    “She covered for her colleague’s mistake.”

    Synonyms: protect, shield

  8. trip upphrasal verb

    To make a mistake, or cause one.

    “He tripped up when asked about the dates.”

    Synonyms: slip up, stumble

  9. wriggle out ofphrasal verb

    To avoid a duty using clever excuses.

    “He always wriggles out of doing the washing-up.”

    Synonyms: get out of, dodge

  10. dig upphrasal verb

    To discover hidden information.

    “Reporters dug up details of the secret deal.”

    Synonyms: unearth, uncover

Endings & Consequences 10

  1. wrap upphrasal verb

    To finish or complete something.

    “Let’s wrap up the meeting and go home.”

    Synonyms: finish off, conclude

  2. peter outphrasal verb

    To gradually come to an end.

    “The initial excitement soon petered out.”

    Synonyms: fizzle out, die out

  3. result inphrasal verb

    To cause a particular outcome.

    “The error resulted in serious delays.”

    Synonyms: lead to, bring about

  4. lead tophrasal verb

    To cause or bring about something.

    “Too much stress can lead to poor health.”

    Synonyms: result in, cause

  5. end upphrasal verb

    To finally be in a place or situation.

    “We took a wrong turn and ended up lost.”

    Synonyms: wind up, land up

  6. follow on fromphrasal verb

    To happen as a result of something earlier.

    “This study follows on from our earlier work.”

    Synonyms: stem from, arise from

  7. stem fromphrasal verb

    To be caused by something.

    “Most of the errors stem from poor planning.”

    Synonyms: arise from, originate in

  8. come down tophrasal verb

    To have something as the deciding factor.

    “In the end, it all comes down to trust.”

    Synonyms: boil down to, hinge on

  9. spill over intophrasal verb

    To begin to affect another area.

    “The dispute spilled over into open conflict.”

    Synonyms: extend into

  10. live withphrasal verb

    To accept an unpleasant situation.

    “We will simply have to live with the decision.”

    Synonyms: put up with, tolerate