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Jigneshbharati Posted 6 years ago
Grammar

From your ideas

Using uncommon words, instead of making your paper seem smarter, generally detracts from your ideas.

50 linking words to use in academic writing - Elite Editing
Is "from" just a plain preposition here?
Or being used to form a phrasal verb-detract from?
How do we know that "detract from" is not used as a phrasal verb?
  

Top answer

Some people restrict the term "phrasal verb" to the combination "verb + 'small' adverb". By that definition, "verb + preposition" can't be a phrasal verb -- it would be a "prepositional verb". I think some other people may include prepositional verbs as a subset of phrasal verbs.

  • Some people restrict the term "phrasal verb" to the combination "verb + 'small' adverb".
  • By that definition, "verb + preposition" can't be a phrasal verb -- it would be a "prepositional verb".
  • I think some other people may include prepositional verbs as a subset of phrasal verbs.
  • In either case, "phrasal/prepositional verb" does not have an exact definition.
  • The combination just has to be "idiomatic enough".
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1 Answers
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Some people restrict the term "phrasal verb" to the combination "verb + 'small' adverb". By that definition, "verb + preposition" can't be a phrasal verb -- it would be a "prepositional verb". I think some other people may include prepositional verbs as a subset of phrasal verbs. In either case, "phrasal/prepositional verb" does not have an exact definition. The combination just has to be "idi

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