Thursday, March 5, 2020

11 English Collocations with All ?? - Learn English with Harry

11 English Collocations with All ?? - Learn English with Harry This is Harry and welcome back to Harrys English grammar lessons and helpful tips to get you to be more confident to speak your English. Today, were going to talk to you about collocations with ALL. 11 English Collocations with All So I have 11 collocations with all for you and Ill talk you through each of them slowly, with some good examples and hopefully then youll be able to understand how exactly we can use them.So the first one is ALL OVER.So all over means everywhere.All over the world there are people starving.All over the world there are people who are rich.So one of the children comes in and they knock over a glass of water and the water goes everywhere.All over the floor, all over the table, clothes, all over your laptop.Oh my God, what has happened? Its all over.And we can also use all over in a slightly different way when we want to put some, statement or some exclamation about something.Well, the game is finished, its all over now. Meaning that was the very last kick of the game and theres nothing anybody can do about the result. Its all over. Its finished.Then we have ALL BUT.And that means almost completely, all but.Im all but out of money.Ive only a little bit of money in my pocket or in my, in my bank, I need some more.Youre driving along the road and youre looking at the little needle on your dashboard and you see that all youre in the red zone of the petrol or your fuel.Oh dear,I’m all but out of petrol, I hope I find a petrol station soon so I can fill up my car.And the next collocation we have is ALL TOO.And this usually means very. We often use it with expressions all too often or all too easy.Hes been late every day this week. He does it all too often for my liking. We should tell them something or we should give him a warning.All too easy. Its all too easy for kids these days. They get anything that they want.  Next one ALL ROUND.All round means a bit like the first one. We gave you words everywhere or around the world. Yeah. You ask one of the children to clean the house and say:Okay, look, if you want some pocket money, youre going to have to work for it. Youre going to have to do some hoovering and mind you, its not just where you see, you have to go all round the house, into the corners.So the weather in the Canary islands is warm all year round. 11 English Collocations with All The next one I have for you is specifically to do with sport and in particular is to do with football.So we use ALL  when were talking about the result  or  the score. Somebody says: Well, whats the score on the match? Its one all.Meaning one goal for one team, one goal for the other team.What was the final result? Two all, ah, an even game, equal, everybody got a point. So two all two goals for your team, two goals for the other team. So one or two, all three or et cetera. Even when theres no score in the game, zero, zero or nil all.The next collocation is ALL TOLD.Meaning to get everything together.Well, all told that wasnt such a bad presentation. I mean, it started off well, the middle was okay. Weve got a good lot of questions at the end.And the next one is KNOW IT ALL.Know it all well this is quite common and often we use it with somebody when we get a little bit annoyed with them and say:Oh, you know it all. Yeah, you think you know it all.Or your children, 16 and 17 year old s. 16 or 17 year olds, they know it all, dont they?Or indeed when you want to give somebody a little bit of a slagging:Ha, ha, you know it all dont you?When really theyve made a mistake and they didnt really get it correct.Now, there is a word, a noun. We can say a knowall. And when we try and tell, when we speak to somebody that thinks they know everything. ‘Ah, youre just a knowall.’ You mean you think you know it all.So know it all and knowall slightly different but with the same intention and the same meeting.And then the next one is TO BE ALL SOMETHING.Usually, we use this with words like to be all smiles. Or to be all innocent.So what do they mean? Well, to be all smiles as somebody whos always got a smile on face, but behind it there might lurk, a hidden meaning.The guy might not be so sincere with these smiles and say: ‘Ah, that guy, hes all smiles. But really you need to be very careful about him because he would stick the knife in when hes, when youre not looking.’ To be all innocent means when someone says: ‘It wasnt me, I couldnt have done that. Oh my God.’ So to be all innocent means somebody who denies that they had any part in anything or they are acting a little bit innocently. And again, theres something there underneath that you might think theyre not as innocent as you think they are.And this one is one of my favourites, ALL TALK.So all talk often comes with another expression all talk but no action. So you can get the hint from that.But exactly it means. So when we talk about somebody being all talk its and nah, nah, nah. But they never followed through with any specific action.When somebody is all talk, they usually tell you what theyre going to do and theyd tell you again what theyre going to do and theyll tell you again what theyre going to do.  But theres no action. They dont follow it through.And the next one we have is ALL-NIGHTER.This is the sort of a invented world. An all-nighter can be a really rough party. Ive had a f ew of those in my time, I can tell you.Were nearly there now and just one last one. ALL IN ALL.All in all it means like taking everything together.Well, all in all, it wasnt such a bad performance, was it? All in all we won the match.Okay guys. So that completes the lesson for today and we were talking about collocations with all.So as I said at the beginning, press that button and subscribe to my YouTube channel Learn English with Harry, and if you want to contact me, you can do so on www.englishlessonviaskype.comand when get there, youll find a link to my Easy Peasy English club. Its a great club to help you to learn better English, to speak better English, to make better pronunciation and above all to make you much more confident in your English.  Click here to join the Easy Peasy Club.Okay, join me again soon. Collocations with ALL - Listen Now

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