mercredi 14 mai 2014

Notes on usage: Stand

Get up  -  Stand up  -  Rise  -  Get to your feet  -  Be on your feet

 

These words ail mean to be in an upright position with your weight on your feet, or to put yourself in this position.

 

Stand to be in an upright position with your weight on your feet: She was too weak to stand. | Stand still when I’m talking to you! Stand is usually used with an adverb or prepositional phrase to show where or how sb stands, but sometimes another phrase or clause is used to show what sb does while they are standing: We stood talking for a few minutes. | He stood and looked out to sea.
Get up to get into a standing position from a sitting, kneeling or lying position: Please don’t get up!
Stand up to be in a standing position; to stand after sitting: Stand up straight! | Everyone would stand up when the teacher entered the classroom.
Rise (formal) to get into a standing position from a sitting, kneeling or lying position: Would you all rise, please, to welcome our visiting speaker.
Get to your feet to stand up after sitting, kneeling or lying: I helped her to get to her feet.
Be on your feet to be standing up: I’ve been on my feet all day.

 

STAND, GET UP OR STAND UP?
Stand usually means ‘to be in a standing position’ but can also mean ‘to get into a standing position’. Stand up can be used with either of these meanings, but its use is more restricted: It is used especially when sb tells sb or a group of people to stand. Get up is the most frequent way of saying ‘get into a standing position’, and this can be from a sitting, kneeling or lying position; if you stand up, this is nearly always after sitting, especially on a chair. If you want to tell sb politely that they do not need to move from their chair, use get up: Please don’t stand up.

 

---------------------------------------------
Top Tips Abz Ingles - Notes on usage - Synonyms
---------------------------------------------

 

See also:

Common Phrasal Verbs Irregular Verbs List
Common Sentences Errors Frequently confused words
Common Clichés Thematic list of Idioms
Common misspellings Phrasal Verbs Particles list
Common Preposition Lista de Términos Gramaticales

No te olvides de compartir esto con tus amigos y compañeros, hagamos de este blog una comunidad de difusión del Inglés como segundo idioma. Antes de irte deja tu comentario y haz clic en Me Gusta.

 

Aucun commentaire:

Enregistrer un commentaire