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Anonymous Posted 14 years ago
Grammar

Clean / clean up

Do we have to say there is a meaning difference between them, clean and clean up? Or they are the same because they are interchangeable but there must be a reason for using 'up' meaning 'completely'. Well...I think it all depends on what aspect we see, so we can say that the meaning is the same or not in a way. What do you native English speakers think? Thank you.
  

Top answer

There is a difference. Let's clean up after dinner. It means to wash and dry the dishes, wipe the table, sweep the floor, etc.

  • There is a difference.
  • Let's clean up after dinner.
  • It means to wash and dry the dishes, wipe the table, sweep the floor, etc.
  • That is to do all the cleaning kinds of things.
  • Let's clean after dinner.
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3 Answers
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There is a difference.

Let's clean up after dinner.

It means to wash and dry the dishes, wipe the table, sweep the floor, etc.
That is to do all the cleaning kinds of things.

Let's clean after dinner.

This is not natural because "clean" needs an object: Let's clean the floor. Let's wash the dishes.

Mother to son:
Clean up your
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The phrasal verb has a couple of other distinct uses.

to rid of undesirable persons or features: They cleaned up the local bars.
to make a large profit, often in a short period of time: cleaned up during the bull market.

(taken from dictionaries)
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I believe that alphecca stars post is somewhat wrong

I am not going to exhaust the list, there's a few reasons it can be clean - up vs clean

Saying simply:

Clean, clean up, clean off, wipe down, rinse off, dry out


is the most vague way to say clean, it can mean so many things it hard to believe, this goes for clean up, and clean off to. If you dont k

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