In the following sentence, can I use all the phrasal verbs?
1) He gets along well with his colleagues.
2) He goes along well with his colleagues.
3) He gets on well with his colleagues.
4) He pulls up well with his colleagues.

Student or Learner
In the following sentence, can I use all the phrasal verbs?
1) He gets along well with his colleagues.
2) He goes along well with his colleagues.
3) He gets on well with his colleagues.
4) He pulls up well with his colleagues.
No.
Only #3 is natural for me, though I imagine #1 is fine for some people.
Where did you get the idea that the others might work?
Typoman - writer of rongs
Last edited by Barman; 29-Oct-2020 at 18:44.
#'s 1. and 3. work in AmE, but #1 would be more common.
1 and 3 both work for me. I'd use 3 but I hear "get along with" almost as often as "get on with".
Where on earth have you seen "pull up well with"? (Please don't tell me it's in that grammar book from 1926!)
Remember - if you don't use correct capitalisation, punctuation and spacing, anything you write will be incorrect.
These exercises where you take a phrasal verb out of its original context and move it into a completely different context really aren't helping you. Please tell us the source of that "pull up with" example sentence.
Remember - if you don't use correct capitalisation, punctuation and spacing, anything you write will be incorrect.
Last edited by Charlie Bernstein; 31-Oct-2020 at 20:34.
I'm not a teacher. I speak American English. I've tutored writing at the University of Southern Maine and have done a good deal of copy editing and writing, occasionally for publication.