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Hello,
my name's Mike. This video lesson is about the phrasal verb
to get up. To get up means
to arise.
To lift oneself up.
To rise from bed,
from a chair or from any other laying
or sitting position. To get up
uses the word up, the preposition up
so that's a good indication at the direction we're going
on this phrasal verb. And I could say I get up
at 5am. This means that I wake up
and I remove myself from bed
5 a.m. in the morning.
What time should I
get up tomorrow? I'm wondering what time should I wake up
and get out of bed. I could say,
my wife could tell me could you please
get up out of that chair and pick up your socks?
I hear that sometimes, um
so I do, I pick up my socks.
What time should I get up tomorrow? I could say
what time should I get the kids
up tomorrow? In that sentence
I am splitting up "get up"
putting "get" and then
the object "the kids" followed by
"up tomorrow" So pretty simple phrasal verb,
practice it a few times. Think about this
the next time you get up from a chair
or you get up from bed and
you get this.