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Anonymous Posted 13 years ago
Grammar

difference between give up and give up on

difference between give up and give up on
  

Top answer

Anonymous difference between give up and give up on The first needs no further text: I gave up. The second needs some sort of object: I gave up on him.

  • Anonymous difference between give up and give up on The first needs no further text: I gave up.
  • The second needs some sort of object: I gave up on him.
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3 Answers
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Anonymousdifference between give up and give up on
The first needs no further text: I gave up.
The second needs some sort of object: I gave up on him.
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When used with an object:

give up normally means stop doing something, e.g. give up smoking
or renounce something, e.g. give everything up can mean renounce all your possessions
give something up to someone ~ donate/give something over to someone
give someone up to X ~ denounce someone to X, e.g. the police


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Anonymous difference between give up and give up on
I tried to climb the mountain five times. I give up. I will not try again.

John promised to bring beer to our picnic, but he didn't. This is the fifth time he has disappointed us by breaking a promise.
I'm giving up on him. I will not invite him again.

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