English Phrasal Verbs - Bail Out, Bail Out On

英语短语动词 - Bail Out, Bail Out On

Listening Time: English Practice

语言学习

2024-11-29

22 分钟
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  • Hey, everybody.

  • Welcome to this week's phrasal verb episode.

  • I hope you're doing great.

  • I hope that you've enjoyed learning a lot of different phrasal verbs with these episodes so far.

  • And in today's episode, we're going to look at two different phrasal verbs.

  • The first one is bail out, and the other one is bail out on.

  • Or a lot of times people just say bail on.

  • It's the same thing, really.

  • Bail out on or bail on.

  • So you might hear either of those.

  • So first, let's define the phrase bail out.

  • So bail out means to rescue a person or organization or business from financial difficulty.

  • Okay?

  • So for example, my parents bailed me out when I couldn't pay the fine.

  • So a fine is like a ticket that you get for some infraction, something that you did wrong, like you broke the rules, and now you have to pay a fine.

  • But in this sentence, I'm saying that I couldn't pay it, so my parents had to bail me out, and they paid it, right?

  • So they kind of rescued me from that financial difficulty.

  • Okay, so that's bail out.

  • And how about bail on or bail out on?

  • This means to abandon or stop supporting someone when they need help or they're in trouble.