Emotions
get over

Everything you need to understand, remember, and actually use this phrasal verb.

What does "get over" really mean?

To recover from something difficult, such as an illness, a loss, or a disappointment.

Main PV
get over
Opposite
hold back
Opposite
hold on
Opposite
break down
get over
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get over Definition
get over

To recover from something emotionally or physically difficult, such as an illness, a breakup, a loss, or a disappointment. It means returning to a normal, stable state after going through something hard.

"It took her almost a year to get over the death of her father."
"He still hasn't gotten over losing the championship match in the final minute."
Neutral Inseparable

As the saying goes…

🏮 As the old Chinese proverb says: 'The heart that learns to get over yesterday's storm has room for tomorrow's sunshine.'

get over Examples
get over
"It took her almost a year to get over the death of her father."
"He still hasn't gotten over losing the championship match in the final minute."
"Don't worry — most people get over a bad job interview pretty quickly once they find a new opportunity."
get over Grammar
get over

Type

Inseparable phrasal verb.

Notes

GET OVER is inseparable, meaning the object always follows the full two-word verb and cannot be placed between 'get' and 'over'. You must say 'She got over the breakup', never 'She got the breakup over' (in this emotional sense). The object — whether a noun phrase or pronoun — always comes after 'over'.

Conjugation

Present Simple get(s) over — I usually get over colds within a week.
Past Simple got over — She got over the disappointment and kept working toward her goal.
Present Continuous is/am/are getting over — He is slowly getting over the shock of losing his job.
Present Perfect has/have gotten over — They have finally gotten over their argument and are speaking again.
get over In Context
get over · In Context

Narrative

Priya had been with Marcos for four years, and when he ended things in March, she was devastated. She stopped going to her Saturday pottery class and barely answered texts. By June, her friend Leila started dragging her out for evening walks, making her talk about small things — new restaurants, a funny coworker, a podcast. One night, Priya laughed — really laughed — at something stupid Leila said, and they both went quiet for a second. 'I think I'm starting to get over it,' Priya said softly. Leila squeezed her arm. 'I know,' she said. 'I could tell.'

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get over Common Errors
get over · Common Errors
She got the breakup over after a few months.
She got over the breakup after a few months. GET OVER is inseparable in its emotional meaning, so the object must always follow 'over', never be placed between 'get' and 'over'.
I need to get over from my disappointment and move forward.
I need to get over my disappointment and move forward. GET OVER does not take the preposition 'from' — the object follows directly after 'over' with no additional preposition.
get over Shadowing
get over · Shadowing
She finally got over her fear of public speaking last year.

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It's hard to get over a friendship that ended badly.

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He got over the rejection faster than anyone expected him to.

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You can't rush someone when they're trying to get over grief.

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get over Narrative
get over · Narrative

In the autumn of 1849, Frederick Douglass received news that his close friend and mentor, William Lloyd Garrison, had turned sharply against him. For years, Garrison had championed Douglass, helping to launch his public career as an abolitionist speaker after Douglass escaped slavery in 1838. But when Douglass founded his own newspaper, The North Star, in Rochester, New York, and later changed his views on the Constitution, Garrison felt betrayed and publicly attacked him. The rupture was painful — Douglass had once called Garrison the most important white ally in his life. Letters from the period show Douglass describing deep hurt and disillusionment. Yet rather than withdraw, Douglass channeled that pain into his work, becoming a more independent, more powerful voice for abolition and, later, for women's suffrage. He rebuilt his sense of purpose without Garrison's approval, and by the 1860s was advising President Lincoln directly. Douglass did not forget the betrayal, but he refused to be defined by it. In the truest sense, he found a way to get over it — and in doing so, grew into a larger version of himself.

180 words
hold back Definition
hold back

To stop yourself from showing or expressing a feeling, or to prevent yourself from doing or saying something. When you hold back, you keep something under control rather than letting it out freely.

"She held back her tears when she said goodbye to her childhood home for the last time."
"During the heated argument, Marcus managed to hold back the angry words he knew he would later regret."
Neutral Separable

As the saying goes…

🏮 As the old Chinese proverb says: 'The man who holds back every tear will one day sneeze very suspiciously.'

hold back Examples
hold back
"She held back her tears when she said goodbye to her childhood home for the last time."
"During the heated argument, Marcus managed to hold back the angry words he knew he would later regret."
"The coach could see that the athlete was holding back her excitement before the official results were announced."
hold back Grammar
hold back

Type

Separable phrasal verb.

Notes

As a separable phrasal verb, 'hold back' can be split by placing a noun object between 'hold' and 'back' — for example, 'She held back her tears' or 'She held her tears back.' When the object is a pronoun, separation is required: you must say 'She held them back,' never 'She held back them.'

Conjugation

Present Simple hold(s) back — I hold back my frustration when my boss interrupts me.
Past Simple held back — She held back her laughter during the solemn ceremony.
Present Continuous am/is/are holding back — He is holding back a lot of emotion right now.
Present Perfect have/has held back — They have held back their concerns for far too long.
hold back In Context
hold back · In Context

Narrative

Priya had rehearsed the conversation a hundred times. She needed to tell her older brother that his dismissive comments had been hurting her for years. When she finally sat across from him at their mother's kitchen table, she felt the familiar tightness in her throat. For a moment she almost held back — smiled, changed the subject, let it go again. But this time she let herself speak. Her voice cracked once, then steadied. Her brother went quiet. Neither of them had expected honesty to feel so much like relief.

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hold back Common Errors
hold back · Common Errors
She held back them when she heard the sad news about her friend.
She held them back when she heard the sad news about her friend. When the object of 'hold back' is a pronoun (them, it, him, her, etc.), it must go between 'hold' and 'back,' never after 'back.'
He was holding back from cry during the funeral service.
He was holding back from crying during the funeral service. After the preposition 'from,' a verb must appear in its gerund (-ing) form, not its base infinitive form.
hold back Shadowing
hold back · Shadowing
She held back her tears until she reached the car.

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Sometimes holding back is harder than speaking your mind.

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He held his frustration back and chose his words carefully.

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Don't hold back — tell me exactly how you're feeling.

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hold back Narrative
hold back · Narrative

On the night of April 3, 1968, Martin Luther King Jr. delivered what would become his final public speech at the Mason Temple in Memphis, Tennessee. He was exhausted, ill, and had nearly skipped the event altogether. Standing before striking sanitation workers — men who had endured violent intimidation for weeks — King spoke about threats on his life and said, with startling calm, that he had 'been to the mountaintop' and was no longer afraid to die. Aides present that night later recalled that King wept backstage after the speech, overcome by the weight of what he sensed was coming. He did not hold back those private tears, though for months he had held back his deeper fears from the public platform, projecting strength so that others would not lose courage. He was assassinated the following evening. The episode reveals something true about 'holding back': sometimes what we suppress in front of others costs us greatly in private, and the choice of when — and for whom — to hold back defines the kind of strength we carry.

173 words
hold on Definition
hold on

To hold on means to wait for a short time, or to continue doing something even though it is hard or painful. It describes both a brief pause and the act of persisting through difficulty.

"The doctor asked me to hold on for a moment while she checked my results."
"He lost his job and his savings, but he held on until things started to improve."
Neutral Inseparable

As the saying goes…

🏮 As the old Chinese proverb says: 'The man who holds on one minute longer than his opponent has already won — and also missed a very comfortable nap.'

hold on Examples
hold on
"The doctor asked me to hold on for a moment while she checked my results."
"He lost his job and his savings, but he held on until things started to improve."
"Just hold on — the bus will be here in two minutes."
hold on Grammar
hold on

Type

Inseparable phrasal verb.

Notes

Hold on is an inseparable phrasal verb, meaning no object can be placed between the verb and the particle. You cannot say 'hold a moment on' or 'hold it on.' The phrase is used alone: 'Hold on — I need a second.' Note that 'hold on to something,' which means to grip or keep something, is a related but distinct expression with a different meaning.

Conjugation

Present Simple hold on — I always hold on when the path gets difficult.
Past Simple held on — She held on until help finally arrived.
Present Continuous am/is/are holding on — He is holding on, but the pressure is enormous.
Present Perfect have/has held on — They have held on for three difficult years.
hold on In Context
hold on · In Context

Narrative

Priya had been studying for her nursing licensing exam for eight months. After failing the second time, she sat in her car in the parking lot and cried. Her supervisor, who had passed on her fourth attempt, called that evening. 'I know you want to quit,' she said. 'But hold on. You understand more than you realise.' Priya looked at her notes spread across the kitchen table. She rescheduled the exam for six weeks later, studied differently this time — out loud, with a partner — and passed. She later said that phone call was the reason she didn't give up.

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hold on Common Errors
hold on · Common Errors
I can't hold on this situation any longer.
I can't hold on any longer. — 'Hold on' meaning 'endure' is used without a direct object; if you want to name what you are keeping, use 'hold on to': 'I can't hold on to this situation any longer' (meaning you can't maintain your grip on it).
She holded on through the whole crisis.
She held on through the whole crisis. — 'Hold' is an irregular verb; its past simple form is 'held,' not 'holded.'
hold on Shadowing
hold on · Shadowing
Just hold on — we are almost at the finish line.

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She held on through the hardest year of her life.

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Can you hold on while I find the right document?

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He told himself to hold on, one more day.

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hold on Narrative
hold on · Narrative

In the winter of 1914–1915, Ernest Shackleton's ship Endurance became trapped in pack ice in the Weddell Sea, Antarctica. Rather than abandon his men, Shackleton made a decision that defined his leadership: they would hold their position, wait out the ice, and keep morale alive for as long as it took. For ten months the crew lived on the drifting, slowly crushing ship. When Endurance finally sank in November 1915, Shackleton led all 27 men across ice floes and open ocean in a salvaged lifeboat to reach the uninhabited Elephant Island — and then sailed a further 800 miles to South Georgia to get help. Not one man died. What made survival possible was the daily, unglamorous discipline of continuing when quitting seemed rational. Historians of leadership still study those months as a masterclass in endurance. The crew held on not because rescue was certain, but because Shackleton persuaded them that holding on was the only real option they had.

155 words
break down Definition
break down

To break down means either (1) to stop working properly, as a machine or system does when it fails, or (2) to suddenly lose control of your emotions and start crying. Both senses share the idea of something — a machine or a person — reaching a point where it can no longer hold itself together.

"The old truck broke down on the highway, and we had to wait two hours for a tow truck."
"During the funeral speech, Marcus broke down in tears and couldn't finish his words."
Neutral Inseparable

As the saying goes…

🏮 As the old Chinese proverb says: 'Even the iron ox breaks down — how much more so the man who never rests.'

break down Examples
break down
"The old truck broke down on the highway, and we had to wait two hours for a tow truck."
"During the funeral speech, Marcus broke down in tears and couldn't finish his words."
"Peace negotiations broke down after neither side could agree on the key terms."
break down Grammar
break down

Type

Inseparable phrasal verb.

Notes

In its primary senses — stopping functioning or losing emotional control — 'break down' is inseparable: you cannot place an object between the two parts. You say 'she broke down' or 'the engine broke down,' not 'she broke her emotions down.' However, when 'break down' means to divide something into smaller parts or categories, it becomes separable: 'Can you break the report down into sections?' or 'Can you break down the report into sections?' are both correct.

Conjugation

Present Simple break/breaks down — The system breaks down whenever there is too much pressure.
Past Simple broke down — She broke down when she finally told someone the truth.
Present Continuous is/are breaking down — He is breaking down in the middle of the interview.
Present Perfect have/has broken down — The negotiations have broken down twice this month.
break down In Context
break down · In Context

Narrative

Priya had held herself together for three weeks after her father's diagnosis — managing appointments, calling relatives, updating insurance forms. She told herself there was no time to feel anything yet. Then one Tuesday afternoon, she was washing dishes and a song her father used to hum came on the radio. She turned off the tap, sat down on the kitchen floor, and completely broke down. Her roommate found her there twenty minutes later and simply sat beside her, saying nothing. Sometimes, Priya thought, you don't choose when the walls come down — they choose for you.

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break down Common Errors
break down · Common Errors
She broke down herself when she heard the bad news.
She broke down when she heard the bad news. — 'Break down' is inseparable in this emotional sense, so no object or reflexive pronoun can be inserted between 'break' and 'down.'
The car breaked down on the way to the airport.
The car broke down on the way to the airport. — 'Break' is an irregular verb; its past simple form is 'broke,' not 'breaked.'
break down Shadowing
break down · Shadowing
She broke down the moment she read the letter.

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Our car broke down just outside the city limits.

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He tried to stay calm but finally broke down completely.

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The ceasefire talks broke down after only two days.

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break down Narrative
break down · Narrative

On the night of June 4, 1940, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill stood before the House of Commons and delivered one of the most consequential speeches of the twentieth century — the 'We shall fight on the beaches' address. What many people do not know is what happened immediately afterward. Churchill walked off the floor of the House, turned to a colleague, and reportedly muttered, 'And we'll fight them with the butt ends of broken bottles, because that's bloody well all we've got.' According to close aides, in private moments during those first desperate months of the war — with France collapsing, Dunkirk barely survived, and invasion seemingly imminent — Churchill did, on at least one occasion, break down in private, weeping openly. He had built a public image of granite-like resolve, but the weight of responsibility for millions of lives took its toll in rooms where no cameras watched. That private fracture, those moments of breaking down, may have made his public composure more genuine, not less. Even the strongest systems — human or mechanical — can reach a point where they simply break down.

180 words
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