Learn 15 English Phrasal Verbs about CRIME!

68,848 views ・ 2017-06-19

Benjamin’s English


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Hi there. Welcome back to engVid with me, Benjamin. How are you today?
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Hope you're well
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wherever you're watching this from. In today's lesson we are looking at phrasal verbs to do with crime.
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Why might this be of interest to you? Well, I don't know. If you watch a
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TV detective series, which are becoming increasingly popular, then you will start to understand
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more if you're watching American or English series. God forbid you might come to the UK
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or America and find yourself in a situation in which you are needing to speak to the police.
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Maybe some of the words here will help you get out of that situation smoothly. Or you
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may just be able to use these phrasal verbs to help your overall conversational fluency.
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Today's section is... Today's lesson is organized into three sections. We have before a crime,
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an incident; we have during; and we have what happened after.
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So, a few years ago I had a German student who came to visit me here in London, and I
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showed him around for a week. Lovely guy called Robert. And I took him to the law courts,
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so I took him to the most famous courts in London called the Old Bailey, which is where
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some quite nasty crimes where the... Where the people accused go to court. I'll just
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write that down, people accused. So if you're accused of a crime it means someone says you
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have done something bad, you need to be punished. So they go to court. They go to court. Okay?
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So, this particular story, I was there with Robert listening in the court to what had happened.
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Somebody had been put up. "To put somebody up to". Okay, so let's just...
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We have...
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We have a group of people. This person here, he is the boss of the group and he is
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putting pressure on, he wants this person to carry... Carry out a crime. Okay? To carry
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out a crime, to do something bad. So he starts putting somebody up to, so he starts going:
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"Come on, so-and-so, you can do this. It would be a really good idea. You'll get lots of money."
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Okay? So, "to put somebody up to", to put them up. You're putting them up, you're
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helping them be able to do it, to put somebody up to, to encourage, to help them to do it.
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"Put somebody up to", to make them think they can do it.
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Next phrase: "To lead somebody on". So, here we have boss, and we'll call this man Gareth.
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Boss says to Gareth: "Come on, Gareth, come with me. We're going to go and do something. It's a great idea."
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So, Gareth is following boss. Yes? He is taking the lead from the
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boss. He is leading him on. "Lead somebody on" is to give...
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Is to give a bad example.
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Next verbal... Phrasal verb: "Get mixed up in".
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Gareth has found that he is with the
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wrong people. Yeah? If you think of a box of sweets, they all get mixed up. Gareth,
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here, has got mixed up with some bad people. "To get mixed up in" means to hang out with...
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To get mixed up in, to hang out with the wrong people. Okay.
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"Lean on". Gareth has started saying: "Mm, not sure, boss, if that's what I want to do.
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I'm not sure if it's a good idea to go into a shop with a gun and ask for all of their money."
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But boss starts leaning on Gareth. Yeah? He starts leaning on Gareth and says:
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"Come on, Gareth, you know it's a good thing to do." Okay? So he leans on.
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"To lean on" means to put pressure. And to lean on someone, you
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could use that in a business context as well, meaning to put a bit of pressure on someone
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to do something.
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Gareth says yes. He agrees to go into this gambling shop with a gun and ask for all of their money.
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So, he comes into the shop with a balaclava, with a hat with just eyes, and
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he says: "This is a hold up. I'm going... This is a hold up." Okay? A "hold up" means,
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you know, hold your hands up. Okay? It's a hold up. Everyone's going to put their hands
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up, and Gareth is going to come and take the money. Okay? To... To do a hold up, to give
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a hold up, to make a hold up, to create a hold up. A hold up. A hold up.
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Now, if Gareth went home and said to boss: "I got a little bit scared. I didn't do it",
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then boss might beat Gareth up. "To beat up" means to attack, to hurt.
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Okay? To cause physical pain. Okay. Gareth comes back from the boss, says:
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"Okay, okay, I'll go back into this shop and continue with what I was doing."
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He finds that the doors have been locked,
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so now he needs to break in. "Break" means to damage something. He has to break the doors
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to get in. It's a break in.
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"Blow up", to blow something up. Gareth comes in, realizes that there is a big wall between
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him and the money, so he must blow the wall up. So he gets some dynamite stick, throws
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it, and then-pooh-the wall is blown up and he can help himself to the money. Okay?
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"To blow up" means... So, again, we find a preposition "up" here totally changing the meaning of
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that word. "Blow" on its own, it's very nice, but with "up", quite violent. Now, Gareth
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"runs off with". To run, yeah. "Off" means away, to run away with. To run away with the
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money. He runs away. To run away.
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Nee-naw, nee-naw, nee-naw, nee-naw. Sound of the police. A "tip off".
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To tip someone off. Now, there was someone in the shop at that time who saw this person. They said to
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the police: "I think it was Gareth." Okay? So, a "tip off" is in... A tip off is to give information.
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Okay. Now, the police have this idea: "Hmm, we think Gareth may have come
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into the shop with a gun. Not very good. And exploded something, and stolen a load of money.
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Not very good."
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They then take this to the court, to the Old Bailey possibly, and then the judge and the
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jury will have to... Just write that down. Jury are the group of citizens, group of people
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who are deciding whether someone is guilty or not. The judge is the man with the funny
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hat, or the woman with the funny hat who says whether... What punishment they will get if
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they are guilty. So they will decide whether to let someone off. Okay? So, this word "let",
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there is an idea of permission to say that someone is able to do something.
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"You have permission to go, Gareth." Or:
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"We are going to lock the door, lock up, make sure it's really tight, the lock of the prison door,
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because Gareth, you are going under. You are going down. You're going down."
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Okay? I'll write that down. Going down. Often in a court
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an accused person if they're found guilty would have to go down if they're going back
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down to prison. So if someone's going down, it means they're going to prison. This is
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British English. American English you may find some differences. But having watched
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this case with my friend Robert, we found that they got away with the crime.
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"To get away with" means: "Dah, dah, dah, dah, dah, dah, dah. No punishment for me, thank you.
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I'm going out of here."
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Quick revision of this lesson: "to put somebody up to", "to lead somebody on", "to get mixed"...
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Okay? So these two and "to lean on", put pressure on someone to do something.
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"To get mixed up in": "Uh, uh, oh. I'm with the wrong people". "Hold up! This is a hold up." Okay? You're
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thinking guns, you're thinking money, being stolen. "Beaten up", "to break in",
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to smash your way into somewhere. "To blow up", "to run away with". "Tip off":
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"So-and-so did it, it was him." If you're "let off", no punishment.
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"To lock someone up", bang, into the prison they go. Or are they going to "get away" with it?
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No, they're "going down".
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Thanks for watching. Give the quiz a go, and I'll see you in the next lesson.
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Good bye.
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