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  • Hi, guys.

  • I'm Ronnie.

  • I'm going to teach you some dreaded phrasal verbs.

  • Hmm...

  • I know that learning English is difficult, and phrasal verbs are very difficult because

  • they just don't make sense.

  • Okay?

  • So, when you look at a verb in English, you have, like, for example: "calm" or "jack"

  • or "beat", and then there's a pronoun with it, it gets very confusing.

  • So, just a little warning, here, people, if you are not mature enough to watch this

  • -no matter your age-I suggest you turn it off or don't share it.

  • Yeah?

  • How about that as an idea?

  • If you're offended by phrasal verbs of a sexual nature, don't share the video.

  • Mm-hmm.

  • Turn it off, watch another video.

  • Watch a different channel.

  • Do what you do.

  • So, I'm going to teach you phrasal verbs Ronnie style because they're about sex - oh yeah.

  • So, sexual phrasal verbs.

  • This is what makes me laugh all the time.

  • Every day at my work and in my house...

  • Not my house.

  • In my apartment I have an elevator and there is a voice in the elevator and the elevator says:

  • "Going down", hee-hee-hee, I every day giggle, and I say: "I wish", and other people look at me and go:

  • "Why is this crazy lady laughing at the elevator because it says 'Going down'?"

  • What these people don't realize, because maybe they don't have a hilarious sense of humour

  • or they don't know the phrasal verb to go down on someone - "going down" means to have

  • oral sex with someone, so when the elevator opens up and a person's voice goes:

  • "Going down", I'm like: "Okay, in the elevator? Cool."

  • So, first of all, phrasal verbs are always a verb and a preposition.

  • So, prepositions are things like: "over", "in", "on", "out", "down", "up", "out".

  • So, these prepositions with the verb together will have a completely different meaning than

  • if you just have one verb.

  • So, for example, the verb "eat" we know, but when I put it with "eat out", you guys think:

  • "Oh, hey, yeah, guess what?

  • I went to a restaurant last night and I ate out", and I die, I just laugh because, ladies

  • and gentlemen, if you "eat out" or "eat someone out" it means you have, or are having, or

  • had oral sex again.

  • So: "go down" and "eat out" both mean you're having oral sex.

  • So, this is why I laugh all the time.

  • People think I'm in a good mood.

  • I just think people say things that are funny.

  • So, I'm going to teach you some sexual phrasal verbs.

  • First one: "bend over".

  • It actually sounds like a person's name in English.

  • Does anybody know anybody named: "Ben Dover"?

  • If anyone's a fan of The Simpsons, Bart Simpson will call a bar and say:

  • "Uh, is Ben Dover there, please? Can somebody Ben Dover?

  • Can somebody get my Ben Dover?"

  • "Bend over" basically means that you put your body like this and you stick your bum in the

  • air, and you're having sex like that.

  • Good job, I think you can imagine what happens next if you bend over.

  • If your name is Ben Dover, your parents are funny and probably you might want to change

  • your name.

  • Maybe Benny Dover?

  • Nah, good luck with that.

  • Benjamin Dover?

  • Better.

  • We also have: "cum on".

  • This means you blow your load or you get sperm on someone, someone's part of their body,

  • maybe their face (which is bukake) or you can cum on the wall, which might be embarrassing,

  • you can cum wherever you're having fun with your little wiener, there.

  • You cum on something or someone, it means you get sperm somewhere.

  • Same with the word "jizz on" and "spooge on".

  • So, cum on, jizz on, and spooge on means ejaculation time.

  • So, "ejaculate on someone" means you get sperm on someone or something - done.

  • But some of you guys might have a different technique where you "cum in" something, like a sock.

  • I've seen it in a movie.

  • Some guys like to masturbate into a sock, so you would say: "I came", which is the past

  • tense or "cum in a sock".

  • So, "c um", the past tense is "came". See?

  • It's verbs, it's real life, it's past tense.

  • As I said before, when people tell me that they are going to eat out tonight, I think

  • that's a lot of information that I don't need to know.

  • They mean they're going to a restaurant, but in my brain and I'm sure a lot of other people's

  • brains, "eat out" means oral sex.

  • So does "go down", going down.

  • We can also say "on someone".

  • So you can say: "I was going down on my girlfriend",

  • "I was going down on my boyfriend", that means

  • that you're having oral sex.

  • "Eat out" is only if you're having oral sex, performing oral sex on a woman, but "go down"

  • is for men and women interchangeably.

  • A little debate about this: "feel up".

  • So, if you're feeling somebody up, usually a guy feels up a girl, you squeeze some body parts.

  • Right?

  • So, guys would say: "I felt her up", past tense.

  • "Felt her".

  • We usually use it for girls, but hey, if you want to feel up a guy, that's fine, that's your business.

  • Another one that is probably really important if you don't want to get your girlfriend or

  • your wife pregnant is you "pull out".

  • So, "pull out" means you don't ejaculate inside of someone.

  • And this is a very good method of birth control if you don't want to get the girl pregnant.

  • So if you pull out, it means you don't ejaculate inside.

  • Sometimes this will be in a movie, like: "The guy pulled out so fast", but he's talking

  • about, like, driving a car, but in Ronnie's mind that's still a joke because he pulled

  • out too fast.

  • I was like: "Oh, funny!"

  • Oh yes, movies are funny when they're not supposed to be.

  • But actually they use a lot of these in movies, that's why when you watch a movie and when

  • a native speaker watches a movie, I'm laughing and you're not because you don't get the sexual phrasal verb.

  • Now you do.

  • Just let me write "ejaculate" again.

  • So you don't ejaculate inside someone.

  • The next one is to "suck someone off".

  • Now, one thing about phrasal verbs, sexual phrasal verbs or other phrasal verbs is that

  • sometimes they can be separated.

  • So some of them we can put the subject between the verb and the preposition.

  • So, you can "suck someone off", this means you give someone a "blow job" which is oral

  • sex; and also we have "jack someone off", which means a "hand job", which means you

  • pleasure someone with your hands.

  • No demonstrations, please, Ronnie, we're trying to enjoy the video.

  • So, I remember a long time ago some pop band, I think it was Blink 182 had an album that said:

  • "Take off your pants and jack it".

  • Hilarious, because you think: "That's nice, your pants and your jacket."

  • But then you go: "Oh my god, that's hilarious because they mean take off your pants and

  • masturbate, because "jack it" means masturbate.

  • It's the same as "jack off", "beat off", "whack off", or "stroke it".

  • So, all of these ones means masturbate for men.

  • Ladies, we don't get any of these.

  • We have "flick the bean", not a phrasal verb.

  • Sorry, I'll cover that in a next lesson.

  • And we also have one that is like a song: "Get it on."

  • So many songs. "Bang a gong, get it on."

  • We'll get that up on the website for you, but: "Get it on" basically means have sex.

  • In so many songs, especially from the 60s or the 70s there's a lot of censorship and

  • people couldn't say: "I want to have sex with you tonight", so they say stuff like:

  • "Let's get it on, baby", and you're like: "Get what on?

  • What am I on?

  • Who's, who's...?

  • Who's it?"

  • Guess what?

  • "Get it on" just means have sex.

  • So, phrasal verbs are difficult, but they can be fun and they can be funny, and learning

  • them will help you laugh at movies.

  • And it'll help you understand why someone says: "Hey, come on. Stop doing that."

  • I just crack up.

  • Going down?

Hi, guys.

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