Phrasal Verbs - FALL: fall for, fall in, fall behind, fall through...

721,503 views ・ 2014-11-18

Adam’s English Lessons


μ•„λž˜ μ˜λ¬Έμžλ§‰μ„ λ”λΈ”ν΄λ¦­ν•˜μ‹œλ©΄ μ˜μƒμ΄ μž¬μƒλ©λ‹ˆλ‹€. λ²ˆμ—­λœ μžλ§‰μ€ 기계 λ²ˆμ—­λ©λ‹ˆλ‹€.

00:01
Hi. Welcome again to www.engvid.com. I'm Adam. In today's lesson, we're going to look at
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μ•ˆλ…•. www.engvid.com에 λ‹€μ‹œ μ˜€μ‹  것을 ν™˜μ˜ν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. μ €λŠ” μ•„λ‹΄μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. 였늘 μˆ˜μ—…μ—μ„œλŠ”
00:06
phrasal verbs again. I know everybody likes these. I've heard all the comments. So again,
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ꡬ동사λ₯Ό λ‹€μ‹œ μ‚΄νŽ΄λ³΄κ² μŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. λ‚˜λŠ” λͺ¨λ‘κ°€ 이것을 μ’‹μ•„ν•œλ‹€λŠ” 것을 μ••λ‹ˆλ‹€ . λŒ“κΈ€ λ‹€ λ“€μ—ˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. λ‹€μ‹œ,
00:12
what are phrasal verbs? Phrasal verbs are a combination of a verb and a preposition
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κ΅¬λ™μ‚¬λŠ” λ¬΄μ—‡μž…λ‹ˆκΉŒ? κ΅¬λ™μ‚¬λŠ” 동사와 μ „μΉ˜μ‚¬μ˜ μ‘°ν•©μœΌλ‘œ 두 단어 μžμ²΄μ™€λŠ”
00:19
that together have a very different meaning than the two words by themselves. Today's
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맀우 λ‹€λ₯Έ 의미λ₯Ό κ°–μŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€ . 였늘의
00:24
phrasal verbs are going to be with the verb "fall". "Fall apart", "fall out", "fall behind",
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κ΅¬λ™μ‚¬λŠ” "fall"μ΄λΌλŠ” 동사와 ν•¨κ»˜ ν•  κ²ƒμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. "떨어지닀", "떨어지닀", "뒀쳐지닀", "떨어지닀", "떨어지닀"
00:31
"fall for", "fall through", "fall in", "fall in with", "fall back", "fall back on". Different
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, "떨어지닀" , "떨어지닀", "λ’€λ‘œ 떨어지닀", "λ’€λ‘œ 떨어지닀".
00:41
meanings to "in" and "in with", "back, and "back on". So let's start.
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"in"κ³Ό "in with", "back, and "back on"의 μ˜λ―Έκ°€ λ‹€λ¦…λ‹ˆλ‹€. μ‹œμž‘ν•˜κ² μŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€.
00:46
"Fall apart" -- two meanings we're going to look at today. The first one is, basically,
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"Fall apart" -- 였늘 μ‚΄νŽ΄λ³Ό 두 가지 의미. 첫 λ²ˆμ§ΈλŠ” 기본적으둜
00:53
come apart or disintegrate or break off. So if any of you have ever cooked ribs -- do
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κ°ˆλΉ„λ₯Ό μš”λ¦¬ν•΄ λ³Έ 적이 μžˆλ‹€λ©΄ --
00:59
you like ribs? You know, like, big stack of ribs. Boil them. Put them on the barbecue.
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κ°ˆλΉ„λ₯Ό μ’‹μ•„ν•©λ‹ˆκΉŒ? μ•Œλ‹€μ‹œν”Ό, λ§Žμ€ μ–‘μ˜ κ°ˆλΉ„λ₯Ό μ‚Άμ•„ 바비큐에 μ˜¬λ €λ³΄μ„Έμš”.
01:04
Cook them really, really well. Then, the meat just falls apart, just falls off the bone.
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정말 μ•„μ£Ό 잘 μ΅νž™λ‹ˆλ‹€. 그런 λ‹€μŒ , κ³ κΈ°κ°€ κ·Έλƒ₯ λ–¨μ–΄μ Έμš”, κ·Έλƒ₯ λΌˆμ—μ„œ λ–¨μ–΄μ Έμš”
01:10
Very, very delicious. Another meaning of "fall apart" is to have a nervous breakdown. Excuse
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μ•„μ£Ό μ•„μ£Ό λ§›μžˆμ–΄μš” "떨어지닀"의 또 λ‹€λ₯Έ μ˜λ―ΈλŠ” μ‹ κ²½ 쇠약이 μžˆλ‹€λŠ” κ²ƒμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. μ‹€λ‘€ν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€
01:17
me. A "nervous breakdown" would be -- when someone has a "nervous breakdown" -- I'm sorry
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. "μ‹ κ²½ μ‡ μ•½"은 λˆ„κ΅°κ°€κ°€ "μ‹ κ²½ μ‡ μ•½ κ³ μž₯" -- μ£„μ†‘ν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€
01:30
-- we say they have "fallen apart". They have lost control of themselves emotionally. So
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-- μš°λ¦¬λŠ” 그듀이 "λ–¨μ–΄μ‘Œλ‹€"κ³  λ§ν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. 그듀은 κ°μ •μ μœΌλ‘œ μžμ‹ μ„ ν†΅μ œν•  수 μ—†μ—ˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. 예
01:35
an example. When does a person fall apart? For example, if I had a girlfriend for a very,
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λ₯Ό λ“€μ–΄ λ³΄κ² μŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. μ‚¬λžŒμ€ μ–Έμ œ λ¬΄λ„ˆμ§€λ‚˜μš”?
01:40
very long time, and one day she comes home and she says, "Bye. I'm leaving." Maybe I'll
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μ•„μ£Ό 였랜 μ‹œκ°„μ΄ 흐λ₯΄κ³  μ–΄λŠ λ‚  κ·Έλ…€κ°€ 집에 μ™€μ„œ "μ•ˆλ…•. λ‚˜ 갈게." 미쳐버릴지도 λͺ°λΌ
01:46
go crazy. I'll fall apart. I won't be able to work. I won't be able to sleep. I won't
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. λ¬΄λ„ˆμ Έλ²„λ¦΄κ±°μ•Ό. 일도 λͺ»ν• κ±°μ•Ό. μž λ„ λͺ»μž˜κ±°μ•Ό.
01:50
be able to do anything. That's not necessarily the way things would happen, but for some
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아무것도 λͺ»ν•˜κ² μ–΄. κΌ­ 그런건 μ•„λ‹ˆμ•Ό. 일이 μΌμ–΄λ‚˜λŠ” λ°©μ‹μ΄μ§€λ§Œ μ–΄λ–€
01:54
people, that's how it happens. They just fall apart.
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μ‚¬λžŒλ“€μ—κ²ŒλŠ” 그런 일이 λ°œμƒν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. 그듀은 κ·Έλƒ₯ λ¬΄λ„ˆμ§‘λ‹ˆλ‹€.
01:58
Okay. "Fall out" -- so I'm walking down the street. I'm happy. I'm bouncing around. Something
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μ’‹μ•„. "λ–¨μ–΄μ Έ" -- κ·Έλž˜μ„œ λ‚˜λŠ” 거리λ₯Ό κ±·κ³  μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. ν–‰λ³΅ν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. λ‚˜λŠ” νŠ€κ³  μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. λ­”κ°€
02:05
falls out of my pocket. Basically, it comes out and falls to the ground. That's the very
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λ‚΄ μ£Όλ¨Έλ‹ˆμ—μ„œ λΉ μ Έλ‚˜μ™€μ„œ 땅에 λ–¨μ–΄μ§‘λ‹ˆλ‹€. 그것이 κ°€μž₯
02:11
basic term, "fall out". Another meaning for "fall out" is when you have a fight or a quarrel
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기본적인 μš©μ–΄μΈ "fall out"μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. "fall out"의 또 λ‹€λ₯Έ μ˜λ―ΈλŠ” λˆ„κ΅°κ°€μ™€ μ‹Έμš°κ±°λ‚˜ λ§λ‹€νˆΌμ„ ν•  λ•Œμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€
02:18
with someone. You talk about something; you get into a disagreement; you fight; and then,
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. 당신은 그것에 λŒ€ν•΄ μ΄μ•ΌκΈ°ν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. 무언가; 의견 λΆˆμΌμΉ˜κ°€ 생기고, μ‹Έμš°κ³ , 그리고 λ‚˜μ„œ
02:23
you don't speak to each other anymore. So basically, you had a "falling out" -- if you
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더 이상 μ„œλ‘œμ—κ²Œ 말을 ν•˜μ§€ μ•ŠμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. κ·Έλž˜μ„œ 기본적으둜, μ—¬λŸ¬λΆ„μ€ "폴링 아웃(falling out)"이 μžˆμ—ˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€.
02:27
want the noun of it. A "falling out", a fight. Okay? So a "falling out", a fight. Another
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λͺ…사λ₯Ό μ›ν•œλ‹€λ©΄ λ§μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. "폴링 아웃"은 싸움. μ•Œμ•˜μ§€? κ·Έλž˜μ„œ "falling out", 싸움. 또 λ‹€λ₯Έ
02:36
meaning -- a third meaning -- is basically consequences. For example, in a war, there's
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의미 -- μ„Έ 번째 의미 -- λŠ” 기본적으둜 κ²°κ³Όμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. 예λ₯Ό λ“€μ–΄, μ „μŸμ—μ„œ
02:43
a big bomb dropped somewhere, and then all the fall out -- all the things that fell out
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μ–΄λ”˜κ°€μ— 큰 폭탄이 떨어지고 λͺ¨λ“  낙진이 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. 떨어진 λͺ¨λ“  것
02:48
-- then, all the results. "The fall out for this attack was that many people were left
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-- κ·Έλ‹€μŒμ—λŠ” λͺ¨λ“  κ²°κ³Ό. "T κ·ΈλŠ” 이 곡격으둜 인해 λ§Žμ€ μ‚¬λžŒλ“€μ΄
02:53
homeless or that many people were killed or that the fight extended." So the "fall out"
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집을 μžƒμ—ˆκ±°λ‚˜ λ§Žμ€ μ‚¬λžŒλ“€μ΄ μ£½κ±°λ‚˜ 싸움이 κΈΈμ–΄μ‘Œλ‹€λŠ” κ²ƒμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€." λ”°λΌμ„œ "fall out"은 일반적으둜 λ‚˜μœ 일이 λ°œμƒν•œ
02:59
means the result or the consequence of something that happened, usually something bad. And
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κ²°κ³Ό λ˜λŠ” κ²°κ³Όλ₯Ό μ˜λ―Έν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€ . 그리고
03:06
then, the consequences, of course, are also bad.
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κ·Έ κ²°κ³Ό 도 λ‹Ήμ—°νžˆ λ‚˜μ©λ‹ˆλ‹€.
03:08
"Fall behind" -- again, more than one meaning. The first meaning of "fall behind" means to
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"Fall behind" -- λ‹€μ‹œ λ§ν•˜μ§€λ§Œ, ν•˜λ‚˜ μ΄μƒμ˜ μ˜λ―Έκ°€ μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. "λ’€μ²˜μ§€λ‹€"의 첫 번째 μ˜λ―ΈλŠ”
03:16
be a little bit behind. All my friends are walking. I'm walking with my friends. They're
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μ•½κ°„ λ’€μ²˜μ§„λ‹€λŠ” λœ»μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. λ‚΄ μΉœκ΅¬λ“€μ€ λͺ¨λ‘ κ±·κ³  μžˆλ‹€. μΉœκ΅¬λ“€κ³Ό ν•¨κ»˜ κ±·κ³  μžˆμ–΄μš”. 그듀은
03:20
walking fast, and I start to fall behind. So another word is "lag". "Lag" means to be
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빨리 κ±·κ³  있고 λ‚˜λŠ” λ’€μ²˜μ§€κΈ° μ‹œμž‘ν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. λ”°λΌμ„œ λ‹€λ₯Έ λ‹¨μ–΄λŠ” "지연"μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. "Lag"λŠ”
03:28
behind, not keep pace with. We also use this when we talk about debts. Like, for example,
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λ’€μ²˜μ§€λ‹€, 보쑰λ₯Ό λ§žμΆ”μ§€ μ•Šλ‹€λΌλŠ” λœ»μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. 뢀채에 λŒ€ν•΄ 이야기할 λ•Œλ„ μ‚¬μš©ν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. 예λ₯Ό λ“€μ–΄
03:34
you have to pay bills. Every month, the phone company sends you a bill. Then you pay it
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μ²­κ΅¬μ„œλ₯Ό μ§€λΆˆν•΄μ•Ό ν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. 맀달 μ „ν™” νšŒμ‚¬μ—μ„œ μ²­κ΅¬μ„œλ₯Ό λ³΄λƒ…λ‹ˆλ‹€. 그런 λ‹€μŒ μ§€λΆˆ
03:40
and you pay it. But one month, you missed. So then, the next month, you have to pay the
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ν•˜κ³  μ§€λΆˆν•˜μ‹­μ‹œμ˜€. ν•˜μ§€λ§Œ ν•œ 달, 당신은 λ†“μ³€μŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. 그러면 λ‹€μŒ 달에
03:44
last month's bill and this month's bill. But you don't have enough money, so you let a
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λ§ˆμ§€λ§‰ 달 μ²­κ΅¬μ„œμ™€ 이번 달 μ²­κ΅¬μ„œλ₯Ό μ§€λΆˆν•΄μ•Ό ν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. ν•˜μ§€λ§Œ 돈이 μΆ©λΆ„ν•˜μ§€ μ•ŠμœΌλ‹ˆ
03:48
little bit more go. Now, you're starting to fall behind on your payments. Eventually,
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쑰금 더 λ†“μ•„λ‘μ„Έμš”. 이제 μ§€λΆˆμ΄ λ’€μ²˜μ§€κΈ° μ‹œμž‘ν–ˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. κ²°κ΅­
03:54
the bank will come and take your phone, take your car, take your puppy -- whatever you
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은행이 μ™€μ„œ λ‹Ήμ‹ μ˜ μ „ν™”, μžλ™μ°¨, 강아지λ₯Ό 데렀갈 κ²ƒμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€
03:59
have that's worth any money. That's basically "fall behind". Of course, if I drop this here,
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. 그것은 기본적으둜 "뒀쳐지닀"μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. λ¬Όλ‘  여기에 λ–¨μ–΄λœ¨λ¦¬λ©΄
04:04
it will fall behind me. But that's too simple.
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λ‚΄ 뒀에 λ–¨μ–΄μ§ˆ 것이닀. κ·ΈλŸ¬λ‚˜ 그것은 λ„ˆλ¬΄ κ°„λ‹¨ν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€.
04:08
"Fall for" -- a couple of interesting meanings. "Fall for" -- one, when you "fall for something"
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"Fall for" -- λͺ‡ 가지 ν₯미둜운 μ˜λ―Έκ°€ μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. "Fall for" -- ν•˜λ‚˜, "fall for something"
04:15
or "fall for someone" means you basically fall in love. Okay? I went to the bar. I met
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λ˜λŠ” "fall for someone"은 기본적으둜 μ‚¬λž‘μ— λΉ μ§„λ‹€λŠ” λœ»μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. μ’‹μ•„μš”? λ‚˜λŠ” 바에 κ°”λ‹€. λ‚˜λŠ”
04:21
this girl. I just "fell for" her right then and there. I fell in love. I lost control.
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이 μ—¬μžλ₯Ό λ§Œλ‚¬λ‹€. λ‚˜λŠ” λ°”λ‘œ κ·Έ μžλ¦¬μ—μ„œ κ·Έλ…€μ—κ²Œ "λ°˜ν–ˆλ‹€" . λ‚˜λŠ” μ‚¬λž‘μ— λΉ μ‘Œλ‹€. λ‚˜λŠ” ν†΅μ œλ ₯을 μžƒμ—ˆλ‹€.
04:26
I wanted this person. But then, her friend came and told me that for $50, he will give
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λ‚˜λŠ” 이 μ‚¬λžŒμ„ μ›ν–ˆλ‹€. 그런데 κ·Έλ…€μ˜ μΉœκ΅¬κ°€ μ™€μ„œ 50λ‹¬λŸ¬μ—
04:32
me her phone number. So I gave him $50, and he ran away. I "fell for" his trick. Okay?
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κ·Έλ…€μ˜ μ „ν™”λ²ˆν˜Έλ₯Ό μ•Œλ € μ£Όκ² λ‹€κ³  λ§ν–ˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. κ·Έλž˜μ„œ λ‚˜λŠ” κ·Έμ—κ²Œ 50λ‹¬λŸ¬λ₯Ό μ£Όμ—ˆκ³  κ·ΈλŠ” λ„λ§μ³€μŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. λ‚˜λŠ” 그의 μ†μž„μˆ˜μ— "λΉ μ‘Œλ‹€". μ’‹μ•„μš”?
04:39
So "fall for" means believe something that is not true. Okay? If you are that type of
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λ”°λΌμ„œ "fall for"λŠ” 사싀이 μ•„λ‹Œ 것을 λ―ΏλŠ” 것을 μ˜λ―Έν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€ . μ’‹μ•„μš”? 당신이 그런 μœ ν˜•μ˜
04:46
person, you are gullible. I think I spelled that right. I'll have to check that later.
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μ‚¬λžŒμ΄λΌλ©΄ 속기 μ‰½μŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. λ‚˜λŠ” κ·Έ 철자λ₯Ό μ˜¬λ°”λ₯΄κ²Œ μƒκ°ν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. 그건 λ‚˜μ€‘μ— ν™•μΈν•΄λ΄μ•Όκ² λ„€μš”.
04:51
"Fall for" means believe in a trick or believe in something that is not true, or fall in love.
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"Fall for"λŠ” μ†μž„μˆ˜λ₯Ό λ―Ώκ±°λ‚˜ 사싀이 μ•„λ‹Œ 것을 λ―Ώκ±°λ‚˜ μ‚¬λž‘μ— λΉ μ§€λŠ” 것을 μ˜λ―Έν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€.
04:57
"Fall through" -- "fall through" means when you have a plan or you try to do something,
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"Fall through" -- "fall through"λŠ” κ³„νšμ΄ μžˆκ±°λ‚˜ 무언가λ₯Ό μ‹œλ„ν–ˆμ§€λ§Œ
05:03
but then at the end, it just didn't work. Your attempt failed, so it "fell through".
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κ²°κ΅­μ—λŠ” μž‘λ™ν•˜μ§€ μ•ŠλŠ” 경우λ₯Ό μ˜λ―Έν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. μ‹œλ„κ°€ μ‹€νŒ¨ν•˜μ—¬ "μ‹€νŒ¨"ν–ˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€.
05:09
So last month, I made vacation plans to go to Florida. And then, at the last minute,
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κ·Έλž˜μ„œ μ§€λ‚œλ‹¬μ— ν”Œλ‘œλ¦¬λ‹€λ‘œ νœ΄κ°€ κ³„νšμ„ μ„Έμ› μŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€ . 그리고 λ§ˆμ§€λ§‰ μˆœκ°„μ—
05:16
my boss told me, "No. You have to come into work because there's an emergency. We need
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상사가 λ§ν–ˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. "μ•„λ‹ˆμš”. κΈ΄κΈ‰ 상황이 λ°œμƒν–ˆκΈ° λ•Œλ¬Έμ— μΆœκ·Όν•΄μ•Ό ν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€.
05:20
you to do something." So my plans "fell through" -- fell through the floor, basically, and
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λ­”κ°€ 쑰치λ₯Ό μ·¨ν•΄μ•Ό ν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€." κ·Έλž˜μ„œ λ‚΄ κ³„νšμ€ "μ‹€νŒ¨"ν–ˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. 기본적으둜 λ°”λ‹₯에 λ–¨μ–΄μ‘Œκ³ 
05:25
didn't come out. Now, if you're walking along the street again and there's a sewer where
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λ‚˜μ˜€μ§€ μ•Šμ•˜μŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. 이제 λ‹€μ‹œ 거리λ₯Ό κ±·κ³  μžˆλŠ”λ° λΉ„κ°€ λ‚΄λ¦°
05:30
the water goes in after the rain and you drop your key and they "fall through" the hole
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ν›„ 물이 λ“€μ–΄κ°€λŠ” ν•˜μˆ˜κ΅¬κ°€ 있고 μ—΄μ‡ λ₯Ό λ–¨μ–΄λœ¨λ¦¬λ©΄ ꡬ멍으둜 "λ–¨μ–΄μ§‘λ‹ˆλ‹€"
05:35
-- so "fall through". That's a simple explanation.
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-- κ·Έλž˜μ„œ "λ–¨μ–΄μ§‘λ‹ˆλ‹€". κ°„λ‹¨ν•œ μ„€λͺ…μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€.
05:39
"Fall in" -- this is more, like, military. When a drill sergeant says, "Fall in", everybody
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"Fall in" -- 이것은 κ΅°λŒ€μ— κ°€κΉμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. ꡐ관이 "Fall in"이라고 λ§ν•˜λ©΄ λͺ¨λ‘
05:45
stands in line in a straight line. We all fall in line. It also basically means "get
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μΌμ§μ„ μœΌλ‘œ 쀄을 μ„œκ²Œ λ©λ‹ˆλ‹€. μš°λ¦¬λŠ” λͺ¨λ‘ 쀄을 μ„œ μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. λ˜ν•œ 기본적으둜 "
05:51
with the program" or do what you're supposed to do. In a company, a boss, for example a
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ν”„λ‘œκ·Έλž¨μ— μ°Έμ—¬ν•˜λ‹€" λ˜λŠ” ν•΄μ•Ό ν•  일을 ν•˜λŠ” 것을 μ˜λ―Έν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€ . 예λ₯Ό λ“€μ–΄ 상사와 같은 νšŒμ‚¬μ˜ μƒμ‚¬λŠ”
05:58
supervisor, wants all his staff to "fall in line" with the program. He wants everybody
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λͺ¨λ“  직원이 ν”„λ‘œκ·Έλž¨μ— "동쑰"ν•˜κΈ°λ₯Ό μ›ν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. 그뢄은 λͺ¨λ“  μ‚¬λžŒμ΄
06:03
to understand and follow what is needed to be done. "Fall in with" -- basically, it's
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ν•΄μ•Ό ν•  일을 μ΄ν•΄ν•˜κ³  λ”°λ₯΄κΈ°λ₯Ό μ›ν•˜μ‹­λ‹ˆλ‹€ . "Fall in with" -- 기본적으둜
06:10
the same idea. It means you follow something, but you do it unintentionally. Okay? So for
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같은 μƒκ°μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. 그것은 당신이 무언가λ₯Ό λ”°λ₯΄μ§€λ§Œ μ˜λ„ν•˜μ§€ μ•Šκ²Œ 그것을 ν•œλ‹€λŠ” 것을 μ˜λ―Έν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. μ’‹μ•„μš”?
06:16
example, if you fall in with the wrong people, you somehow joined these people that you didn't
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예λ₯Ό λ“€μ–΄, 당신이 잘λͺ»λœ μ‚¬λžŒλ“€κ³Ό μ–΄μšΈλ¦¬κ²Œ λœλ‹€λ©΄, 당신은 μ–΄λ–»κ²Œ ν•΄μ„œλ“  당신이 μ •λ§λ‘œ μ›ν•˜μ§€ μ•ŠλŠ” μ‚¬λžŒλ“€κ³Ό ν•©λ₯˜ν•˜κ²Œ λ˜μ§€λ§Œ,
06:21
really want to, but somehow, it happened. So when you hear about gangs in America, for
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μ–΄μ¨Œλ“  κ·Έλ ‡κ²Œ λ˜μ—ˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. 예λ₯Ό λ“€μ–΄ , λ―Έκ΅­μ—μ„œ 갱단에 λŒ€ν•΄ 듀을 λ•Œ
06:27
example, a lot of these kids who join gangs basically fell in with these people because
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, 갱단에 κ°€μž…ν•œ λ§Žμ€ 아이듀은 기본적으둜 이 μ‚¬λžŒλ“€κ³Ό μ–΄μšΈλ ΈμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€
06:33
that's what was around them, and now, they're part of the gang; they're gangsters. They
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. 그듀은 κ°±μŠ€ν„°μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. 그듀은
06:37
didn't want to be, but they fell in with the wrong people who pulled them into the gang.
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μ›ν•˜μ§€ μ•Šμ•˜μ§€λ§Œ 그듀을 갱단에 λŒμ–΄λ“€μΈ 잘λͺ»λœ μ‚¬λžŒλ“€κ³Ό ν•¨κ»˜ν–ˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€.
06:44
"Fall back" -- again, I could fall back or backwards -- both okay. "Fall back" and "fall
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"폴백" -- λ‹€μ‹œ 폴백 λ˜λŠ” λ’€λ‘œ λ„˜μ–΄κ°ˆ 수 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€ . λ‘˜ λ‹€ μ’‹μŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. "폴백"κ³Ό "
06:50
back on" are two different things. "Fall back on" -- for example, I'm a teacher. But if
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폴백"은 μ„œλ‘œ λ‹€λ₯Έ 두 κ°€μ§€μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. "λ’€λ‘œ λŒμ•„μ˜€μ„Έμš” " -- 예λ₯Ό λ“€μ–΄, μ €λŠ” μ„ μƒλ‹˜μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. ν•˜μ§€λ§Œ
06:56
for some reason, I couldn't teach anymore, I also went to chef school. I know how to
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μ–΄λ–€ μ΄μœ μ—μ„œμΈμ§€ 더 이상 κ°€λ₯΄μΉ  수 μ—†κ²Œ 되면 μ…°ν”„ μŠ€μΏ¨μ—λ„ λ‹€λ…”μŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€.
07:02
cook. So I can always fall back on my cooking skills to get a job. So it's like "rely",
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μš”λ¦¬ν•  쀄 μ••λ‹ˆλ‹€. κ·Έλž˜μ„œ λ‚˜λŠ” 직업을 μ–»κΈ° μœ„ν•΄ 항상 μš”λ¦¬ κΈ°μˆ μ— μ˜μ§€ν•  수 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€ . κ·Έλž˜μ„œ "μ˜μ§€ν•˜λ‹€",
07:09
"rely on something". I always have a backup, something that I can do if something else
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"무언가에 μ˜μ§€ν•˜λ‹€"와 κ°™μŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. λ‚˜λŠ” 항상 백업을 가지고 있으며, λ‹€λ₯Έ 것이 μž‘λ™ν•˜μ§€ μ•Šμ„ 경우 ν•  수 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€
07:14
doesn't work. I can fall back on that. "Fall back" also means, like, get behind, for example
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. λ‚˜λŠ” 그것에 λ„˜μ–΄κ°ˆ 수 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. " 폴백"은 예λ₯Ό λ“€μ–΄
07:20
in bills, payments, or bills. "I fell back on my payments. I have to catch up now."
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μ²­κ΅¬μ„œ, 결제 λ˜λŠ” μ²­κ΅¬μ„œμ—μ„œ λ’€μ²˜μ§€λŠ” 것을 μ˜λ―Έν•˜κΈ°λ„ ν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. " λ‚΄ μ§€λΆˆκΈˆμ΄ λ–¨μ–΄μ‘ŒμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. μ§€κΈˆ λ”°λΌμž‘μ•„μ•Ό ν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€."
07:26
So there you go. Some phrasal verbs for "fall". By the way, this was a request -- a couple
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κ·Έλž˜μ„œ 당신은 κ°„λ‹€. "fall"에 λŒ€ν•œ 일뢀 ꡬ동사. 그건 κ·Έλ ‡κ³ , 이것은 μš”μ²­μ΄μ—ˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€.
07:31
of requests for this. And that's why we have them here. If you have any questions, please
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이것에 λŒ€ν•œ λͺ‡ 가지 μš”μ²­μ΄μ—ˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. 이것이 μš°λ¦¬κ°€ 여기에 μžˆλŠ” μ΄μœ μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€ . 질문이 μžˆλŠ” 경우
07:36
ask in the comments section on EngVid. Do the quiz, and I'll see you again soon.
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EngVid의 μ˜κ²¬λž€μ— μ§ˆλ¬Έν•˜μ‹­μ‹œμ˜€. ν€΄μ¦ˆλ₯Ό ν’€κ³  곧 λ‹€μ‹œ λ΅™κ² μŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€.
이 μ›Ήμ‚¬μ΄νŠΈ 정보

이 μ‚¬μ΄νŠΈλŠ” μ˜μ–΄ ν•™μŠ΅μ— μœ μš©ν•œ YouTube λ™μ˜μƒμ„ μ†Œκ°œν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. μ „ 세계 졜고의 μ„ μƒλ‹˜λ“€μ΄ κ°€λ₯΄μΉ˜λŠ” μ˜μ–΄ μˆ˜μ—…μ„ 보게 될 κ²ƒμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. 각 λ™μ˜μƒ νŽ˜μ΄μ§€μ— ν‘œμ‹œλ˜λŠ” μ˜μ–΄ μžλ§‰μ„ 더블 ν΄λ¦­ν•˜λ©΄ κ·Έκ³³μ—μ„œ λ™μ˜μƒμ΄ μž¬μƒλ©λ‹ˆλ‹€. λΉ„λ””μ˜€ μž¬μƒμ— 맞좰 μžλ§‰μ΄ μŠ€ν¬λ‘€λ©λ‹ˆλ‹€. μ˜κ²¬μ΄λ‚˜ μš”μ²­μ΄ μžˆλŠ” 경우 이 문의 양식을 μ‚¬μš©ν•˜μ—¬ λ¬Έμ˜ν•˜μ‹­μ‹œμ˜€.

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