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Business English Lessons

Phrasal Verbs with Down 1

If you 'lie down' you go for a rest on a bed or a sofa.

  • You look exhausted. Lie down for a while.
  • I lie down for ten minutes after lunch every day.

If you 'slow down', you go less quickly than before.

  • As I have got older, I seem to have slowed down and to be able to get through less work.
  • Production has slowed down compared with last year.

If you 'calm down', you stop being angry or excited.

  • He got very angry at first but laughed about it when he had calmed down a bit.
  • You need to calm down. You are much too emotional.

If someone or something needs to 'cool down', they are too hot.

  • I am going to take a shower to cool myself down a bit.
  • The coffee is too hot to drink. Let it cool down a bit.

If you 'cut down' something, it can mean that you reduce the number.

  • We need to cut down our workforce by 500 people.
  • You should cut down the number of cigarettes you smoke.

If an argument 'falls down', it is very weak.

  • Your argument falls down when you look at the inflation rate.
  • The argument falls down when you take costs into account.

If you 'mark down' a price, you reduce it.

  • The shirts have been marked down by 50%.
  • Prices have been marked down by 10% across the board.

If things 'quieten down' , they become less noisy.

  • I am not going to speak until you all quieten down a bit.
  • It was very hectic earlier but things have quietened down now.

If you 'tear something down', you pull it with force from a wall or a notice board.

  • He tore down the poster that the union had put up.
  • Somebody has torn down the safety notice I put up.

If you 'tone down' something, you make it less extreme.

  • You need to tone down the language in your letter. It is too hostile.
  • We need to tone down the colors on the website. They are too bright.

exercise 1

exercise 2

exercise 3

exercise 4

Return to the Phrasal Verbs exercise list

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