Learn 15 English Phrasal Verbs about CRIME!

67,130 views ・ 2017-06-19

Benjamin’s English


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:00
Hi there. Welcome back to engVid with me, Benjamin. How are you today?
0
789
3563
00:04
Hope you're well
1
4828
712
00:05
wherever you're watching this from. In today's lesson we are looking at phrasal verbs to do with crime.
2
5540
7638
00:13
Why might this be of interest to you? Well, I don't know. If you watch a
3
13203
3857
00:17
TV detective series, which are becoming increasingly popular, then you will start to understand
4
17060
5420
00:22
more if you're watching American or English series. God forbid you might come to the UK
5
22480
6490
00:28
or America and find yourself in a situation in which you are needing to speak to the police.
6
28970
5750
00:34
Maybe some of the words here will help you get out of that situation smoothly. Or you
7
34720
7150
00:41
may just be able to use these phrasal verbs to help your overall conversational fluency.
8
41870
6496
00:48
Today's section is... Today's lesson is organized into three sections. We have before a crime,
9
48864
7331
00:56
an incident; we have during; and we have what happened after.
10
56220
6374
01:04
So, a few years ago I had a German student who came to visit me here in London, and I
11
64438
6562
01:11
showed him around for a week. Lovely guy called Robert. And I took him to the law courts,
12
71000
7650
01:18
so I took him to the most famous courts in London called the Old Bailey, which is where
13
78650
5930
01:24
some quite nasty crimes where the... Where the people accused go to court. I'll just
14
84580
7579
01:32
write that down, people accused. So if you're accused of a crime it means someone says you
15
92159
7581
01:39
have done something bad, you need to be punished. So they go to court. They go to court. Okay?
16
99740
9618
01:49
So, this particular story, I was there with Robert listening in the court to what had happened.
17
109866
7720
01:59
Somebody had been put up. "To put somebody up to". Okay, so let's just...
18
119348
7832
02:09
We have...
19
129558
1743
02:17
We have a group of people. This person here, he is the boss of the group and he is
20
137407
9243
02:26
putting pressure on, he wants this person to carry... Carry out a crime. Okay? To carry
21
146650
7081
02:33
out a crime, to do something bad. So he starts putting somebody up to, so he starts going:
22
153731
8889
02:42
"Come on, so-and-so, you can do this. It would be a really good idea. You'll get lots of money."
23
162620
5859
02:48
Okay? So, "to put somebody up to", to put them up. You're putting them up, you're
24
168504
6851
02:55
helping them be able to do it, to put somebody up to, to encourage, to help them to do it.
25
175380
8480
03:03
"Put somebody up to", to make them think they can do it.
26
183885
4796
03:10
Next phrase: "To lead somebody on". So, here we have boss, and we'll call this man Gareth.
27
190053
11923
03:25
Boss says to Gareth: "Come on, Gareth, come with me. We're going to go and do something. It's a great idea."
28
205425
7596
03:33
So, Gareth is following boss. Yes? He is taking the lead from the
29
213046
8478
03:41
boss. He is leading him on. "Lead somebody on" is to give...
30
221549
5119
03:49
Is to give a bad example.
31
229961
3214
03:55
Next verbal... Phrasal verb: "Get mixed up in".
32
235430
5812
04:01
Gareth has found that he is with the
33
241852
3282
04:05
wrong people. Yeah? If you think of a box of sweets, they all get mixed up. Gareth,
34
245159
7821
04:12
here, has got mixed up with some bad people. "To get mixed up in" means to hang out with...
35
252980
10757
04:24
To get mixed up in, to hang out with the wrong people. Okay.
36
264193
6020
04:30
"Lean on". Gareth has started saying: "Mm, not sure, boss, if that's what I want to do.
37
270623
8781
04:39
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."
38
279429
6548
04:46
But boss starts leaning on Gareth. Yeah? He starts leaning on Gareth and says:
39
286002
6093
04:52
"Come on, Gareth, you know it's a good thing to do." Okay? So he leans on.
40
292120
4636
04:56
"To lean on" means to put pressure. And to lean on someone, you
41
296781
10044
05:06
could use that in a business context as well, meaning to put a bit of pressure on someone
42
306850
4680
05:11
to do something.
43
311530
1612
05:15
Gareth says yes. He agrees to go into this gambling shop with a gun and ask for all of their money.
44
315795
8345
05:25
So, he comes into the shop with a balaclava, with a hat with just eyes, and
45
325113
5368
05:30
he says: "This is a hold up. I'm going... This is a hold up." Okay? A "hold up" means,
46
330481
6749
05:37
you know, hold your hands up. Okay? It's a hold up. Everyone's going to put their hands
47
337230
5200
05:42
up, and Gareth is going to come and take the money. Okay? To... To do a hold up, to give
48
342430
9240
05:51
a hold up, to make a hold up, to create a hold up. A hold up. A hold up.
49
351670
7880
05:59
Now, if Gareth went home and said to boss: "I got a little bit scared. I didn't do it",
50
359941
8729
06:08
then boss might beat Gareth up. "To beat up" means to attack, to hurt.
51
368670
10752
06:21
Okay? To cause physical pain. Okay. Gareth comes back from the boss, says:
52
381586
7417
06:29
"Okay, okay, I'll go back into this shop and continue with what I was doing."
53
389028
4970
06:34
He finds that the doors have been locked,
54
394023
2776
06:36
so now he needs to break in. "Break" means to damage something. He has to break the doors
55
396936
7120
06:44
to get in. It's a break in.
56
404150
3408
06:50
"Blow up", to blow something up. Gareth comes in, realizes that there is a big wall between
57
410038
9022
06:59
him and the money, so he must blow the wall up. So he gets some dynamite stick, throws
58
419060
7618
07:06
it, and then-pooh-the wall is blown up and he can help himself to the money. Okay?
59
426703
7510
07:14
"To blow up" means... So, again, we find a preposition "up" here totally changing the meaning of
60
434238
10867
07:25
that word. "Blow" on its own, it's very nice, but with "up", quite violent. Now, Gareth
61
445130
9353
07:34
"runs off with". To run, yeah. "Off" means away, to run away with. To run away with the
62
454508
8642
07:43
money. He runs away. To run away.
63
463150
3705
07:48
Nee-naw, nee-naw, nee-naw, nee-naw. Sound of the police. A "tip off".
64
468986
5985
07:54
To tip someone off. Now, there was someone in the shop at that time who saw this person. They said to
65
474996
9929
08:04
the police: "I think it was Gareth." Okay? So, a "tip off" is in... A tip off is to give information.
66
484950
16224
08:21
Okay. Now, the police have this idea: "Hmm, we think Gareth may have come
67
501440
5170
08:26
into the shop with a gun. Not very good. And exploded something, and stolen a load of money.
68
506610
4618
08:31
Not very good."
69
511253
2150
08:33
They then take this to the court, to the Old Bailey possibly, and then the judge and the
70
513496
6538
08:40
jury will have to... Just write that down. Jury are the group of citizens, group of people
71
520059
11171
08:51
who are deciding whether someone is guilty or not. The judge is the man with the funny
72
531230
3680
08:54
hat, or the woman with the funny hat who says whether... What punishment they will get if
73
534910
5220
09:00
they are guilty. So they will decide whether to let someone off. Okay? So, this word "let",
74
540130
7759
09:07
there is an idea of permission to say that someone is able to do something.
75
547889
5026
09:12
"You have permission to go, Gareth." Or:
76
552940
3814
09:17
"We are going to lock the door, lock up, make sure it's really tight, the lock of the prison door,
77
557057
6602
09:23
because Gareth, you are going under. You are going down. You're going down."
78
563684
5414
09:29
Okay? I'll write that down. Going down. Often in a court
79
569123
9401
09:39
an accused person if they're found guilty would have to go down if they're going back
80
579435
5020
09:44
down to prison. So if someone's going down, it means they're going to prison. This is
81
584480
6859
09:51
British English. American English you may find some differences. But having watched
82
591339
7310
09:58
this case with my friend Robert, we found that they got away with the crime.
83
598649
6442
10:05
"To get away with" means: "Dah, dah, dah, dah, dah, dah, dah. No punishment for me, thank you.
84
605116
6554
10:11
I'm going out of here."
85
611670
2227
10:15
Quick revision of this lesson: "to put somebody up to", "to lead somebody on", "to get mixed"...
86
615039
6091
10:21
Okay? So these two and "to lean on", put pressure on someone to do something.
87
621240
7675
10:28
"To get mixed up in": "Uh, uh, oh. I'm with the wrong people". "Hold up! This is a hold up." Okay? You're
88
628940
6101
10:35
thinking guns, you're thinking money, being stolen. "Beaten up", "to break in",
89
635041
4677
10:39
to smash your way into somewhere. "To blow up", "to run away with". "Tip off":
90
639743
5428
10:45
"So-and-so did it, it was him." If you're "let off", no punishment.
91
645196
4671
10:50
"To lock someone up", bang, into the prison they go. Or are they going to "get away" with it?
92
650066
5654
10:55
No, they're "going down".
93
655745
2465
10:58
Thanks for watching. Give the quiz a go, and I'll see you in the next lesson.
94
658210
4039
11:02
Good bye.
95
662274
882
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7