Idioms or phrasal verb

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Rachel Adams

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Nov 4, 2018
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Russian
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Georgia
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Hello.

This exercise is from the book Reading Challenge by Casey Malarcher. Why does the book call these phrasal verbs idioms?


''Find these idioms in the reading. find out (about) [ to learn (of) ] Hey, I just found out that class is cancelled tomorrow. catch on [ to become popular ] In the 1990s, cell phones really caught on. dig in [ to begin eating with excitement ] The child was very hungry, so he dug in before his parents satdown''.
 
Because many phrasal verbs can also be considered idioms and vice versa, e.g. zoom in, hold on, work out, log in, wrap up.
 
How was my comment unhelpulf but not Piscean's? Not only is it unhelpulf, but conspicuosly snide.
 
Because Piscean's, while perhaps tinged with sarcasm, was actually a fairly reasonable suggestion. We can't possibly explain why the author chose to use that term. Your post, however, was simply snarky, sarcastic and actually quite rude to Piscean.
You're not a native speaker of English so, quite possibly, you can't yet discern the difference.
 
I took it up a notch.
 
I took it up a notch.

And that was totally unnecessary. You are still fairly new to the forum. It would be a good idea to stick, for now, to asking questions about language and giving responses when they are helpful and correct.

I am closing this thread before anything escalates unnecessarily. The OP's question has been answered.
 
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