2024-11-29
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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.