This lesson provides a clear and efficient breakdown of versatile phrasal verbs essential for professional fluency. It effectively transforms common linguistic hurdles into practical tools for natural communication.
Deep Dive
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Deep Dive
Turn Out, Turn In, Turn Over & Turn Around (Can you use these correctly?) | English PodcastAdded:
[music] >> Hello everyone. Welcome back to Business English Desk. I'm Laura. And I'm Jamie.
And okay, I have to start with a story. Oh good. I love a story. So last weekend, I went to this event. Okay. And honestly, I almost didn't go. Why not? I was tired. I had a long week. I nearly canceled. But you went. I went. And it turned out to be one of the best nights I've had in months.
>> [laughter] >> See what you did there?
I did it on purpose.
Of course you did. But that's the point.
That phrase turned out just slipped in so naturally. Without even forcing it.
Because that's how these phrases work.
Exactly. And today, we are diving into the turn family. Yes. And this is such a good one because turn phrases are absolutely everywhere. Everywhere.
Today, we have turn out, turn in, turn over, and turn around. Four expressions.
Each one with multiple meanings. Real situations. Professional language.
Everyday conversations. And some meanings that will genuinely surprise you.
Some of them surprised me.
Same. And if you are new here, welcome.
Hit subscribe. Yeah, do that right now.
New episodes every single week. We make English feel like something that belongs to you. Not something that intimidates you. Never that. Strong start today.
I felt it. Okay, are we ready? So ready.
Let's go. Let's turn it around.
>> [laughter] >> Already?
I could not wait. Okay. First one, turn out. Hmm.
So this one, I feel like people use it constantly without even realizing it.
Right. It's one of those invisible phrases. Invisible but essential. So, first meaning, turn out means to happen in a particular way, especially when the result is different from what you expected. Oh yes. It turned out better than I expected. Meaning the result was better. Things went well. Right. Or it turned out to be a complete disaster.
Also very real. Also very possible. And that's the beauty of this phrase. It works for good outcomes and bad ones.
Completely neutral. The result shapes the meaning. I was worried about the presentation, but it turned out really well. Meaning the worry was unnecessary.
Things were fine. Right. Such a natural thing to say after any event. After a job interview. After a difficult meeting. After a first date.
>> [laughter] >> Especially after a first date. So, how did it turn out? Meaning, what was the result? How did it go? Right. And in business reports, the quarter turned out stronger than projected. Meaning the actual result beat the forecast. Very professional sentence. Very impressive in a presentation.
Write that one down. Okay, second meaning. Turn out also means the number of people who attend something. Oh yes.
The turnout for the event was incredible. Meaning a lot of people came. Right. And as a verb, thousands turned out for the parade. Meaning thousands of people showed up for it.
They came out for it. Right. You'll hear this in news reports, event recaps, political coverage. Voters turned out in record numbers. Meaning more people voted than ever before. Very powerful use. Very. And one more meaning. Turn out can mean to switch off a light. Oh, turn off the lights before you leave.
Meaning, switch them off. Don't leave them on. Right. Very household. Very everyday. Something every parent says.
Every parent in history.
Every parent without exception. So, turn out equals something happening in a particular way, the number of people attending an event, and switching off a light. Three meanings. Three very natural uses. And that first one, you will use every single day. Everyday. How did it turn out? Such a good question.
Such a good question. Okay. Part two.
Turn in. Hmm. Okay, so I immediately think of homework.
Classic student instinct.
Old habits. And yes, that is absolutely one meaning. Let's start there then. So, turn in means to submit something, to hand it over officially. Like giving something to someone in authority?
Exactly. Did you turn in your assignment on time? Meaning, did you submit it? Did you hand it in? Right. And in a professional setting, please turn in your expense reports by Friday. Meaning, submit them. Don't miss the deadline.
Right. Very HR language. Very finance department language.
>> [laughter] >> Very the deadline is Friday energy.
We all know that energy. And turn in also means for handing over equipment when you leave a job. Oh yes. When she resigned, she turned in her laptop and badge. Meaning, she returned them. She handed them back officially. Very standard off-boarding process. Very.
Okay, next meaning. Turn in also means to go to bed. Oh, I'm going to turn in early tonight. Meaning, I'm going to bed early. I need rest. Right. And this is so common in casual conversation. So natural. It's late. I think I'll turn in. Meaning, I'm heading to bed. Good night. That sounds so much more natural than I am now going to sleep.
>> [laughter] >> So much more natural.
Nobody says it like that. Nobody. And there's one more meaning. A big one.
Yes. Turn in can mean to report someone to the authorities. Oh, that's a serious one. It is. She turned him in to the police. Meaning, she reported him. She told the authorities about him. Right.
And sometimes people turn themselves in.
Oh, she turned himself in after 3 days.
Meaning, he went to the police voluntarily. He gave himself up. You hear this in crime news constantly.
Constantly. Very dramatic. Very real.
So, turn in means submit something officially, go to bed, and report someone to the authorities. Three very different situations. All in two small words. English never gets boring.
It really doesn't.
>> [laughter] >> Jamie, I mean Laura, it never does.
Smooth recovery.
Thank you. Okay. Part three. Turn over.
Ooh, this one has range. Range how? Like from very physical to very financial. That's quite a spread.
It really is. Okay, first meaning. So, turn over means to physically flip something, to rotate it to the other side. Like flipping a pancake.
Exactly like flipping a pancake. Very important life skill.
Essential. Turn over the page. Meaning, flip it. Go to the next side. Right. Or in cooking, turn over the chicken after 10 minutes.
Meaning, flip it. Cook the other side.
Right. Very practical. Very everyday.
And in a medical context, the nurse turned the patient over carefully.
Meaning, repositioned them. Changed their position gently. Very real healthcare language. Very professional.
Okay, second meaning. And this one is very business. Turnover in business means the total amount of money a company makes in a period. Oh, like revenue. Yes. The company's annual turnover reached 5 million last year.
Meaning, they generated 5 million in total sales. Right. And turnover as a noun is one of the most used words in business English. You'll see it in every financial report. Every annual review.
Every business news article. Their turnover grew by 30%. Meaning, their total revenue increased significantly.
Right. Very impressive statistic. And there's another business use, staff turnover. Yes. The company has a high staff turnover. Meaning, employees keep leaving. They don't stay long. Right.
Turnover as a synonym for replacement in that case, which can signal problems in the workplace. Or just a very competitive industry. True. Context matters. Always. And turnover has one more meaning. Okay. Turn something over means to give control or responsibility to someone else. Oh, like handing something off? Exactly. She turned the project over to her colleague. Meaning she passed the responsibility on. It's now their project to manage. Right. Or in a meeting, I'll now turn things over to Jamie, who will walk us through the data. Ha, very smooth handover.
Very professional. You'll hear this in presentations constantly. Constantly.
I'd like to turn things over to my colleague. Clean. Confident. Sounds like you know exactly what you're doing.
Even if you're making it up as you go.
>> [laughter] >> Especially then. So, turn over equals physically flipping something, total revenue a company generates, staff leaving and being replaced, and passing responsibility to someone else. Four strong meanings. All four very professional. All four very usable.
Especially that turnover one. Write that one down. Seriously. Your next business email will thank you. Guaranteed. Okay.
Last one. Turn around. Oh, this one. I feel like this one has real emotional weight. It does. Some meanings are very literal, and some are deeply motivational. Let's start simple. First meaning, turn around means to physically face the other direction. Like literally rotate your body. Yes. Turn around. I want to show you something. Meaning face the other way. Look behind you. Right.
Or she turned around and walked straight out. Meaning she changed direction. She left. Right. Very visual. Very clear.
And in everyday situations, I turned around and he was just gone.
>> [laughter] >> The drama of it. Right, very dramatic.
But very natural. Right. Okay, second meaning. And this one is where it gets really interesting. Turn around means to completely change a situation from negative to positive. Oh, like a comeback? Exactly like a comeback. The new manager completely turned the company around. Meaning the company was struggling and she fixed it. She changed everything. Right. From failing to thriving. That is powerful. Very powerful. And you'll hear this in business all the time. They turned around their worst-performing store.
Meaning it was the worst. Now it's performing well. Right. A complete transformation. And on a personal level, he really turned his life around after that experience. Meaning something changed in him. He went from a difficult place to something better. That's a meaningful sentence. It really is. Very human. Very human. And turn around as a noun. Yes. What a turnaround! Meaning things have changed dramatically, usually for the better. Right. In sport, in business, in personal stories.
Wherever there's a comeback. Wherever there's a transformation. And there's one more meaning. Yes. Turnaround time means how quickly something is completed. Oh, like a deadline. Like a response time. What's the turnaround time on this project? Meaning how long will it take? When can I expect it?
Right. Our standard turnaround time is 48 hours. Meaning we'll have it done within 2 days. Very professional. Very client-facing language. You'll use this in emails. In proposals. In client calls. Constantly. What's your turnaround?
>> [laughter] >> Such a normal question now. Such a normal question. So, turnaround means physically facing the other direction, completely changing a negative situation, and how quickly something is completed. Ah, three genuinely powerful meanings. Three meanings that will make you sound completely natural in any conversation. Any situation. Turnaround is a beautiful phrase. Turnaround, it really is. Okay. Roleplay time. Yes. All right. Scenario. What's the scene? A job interview. The interviewer and candidate wrapping up. Ooh, very professional setting. Very real situation. And slightly nerve-wracking.
Just slightly. Ready? Ready. So, I'd like to ask you about a challenge you faced professionally. How did it turn out? Well, there was a project last year that I had to turn around quite quickly.
Tell me more. The team had turned in some early work, but the quality wasn't where it needed to be. How did you handle that? I took over and we restructured the approach.
I turned the whole project over to a smaller, focused team. And the outcome?
It turned out really well, actually. We delivered on time. The client was thrilled. Impressive. And what about turnaround time? That's important to us here. Of course. I always aim for a 48-hour turnaround on deliverables, unless the scope requires otherwise.
That's exactly what we need. Before I turn things over to my colleague for the next stage, do you have any questions for me? Just one. How would you describe the company culture? And did everyone catch all of them?
Let's count. Turned out. Turned around.
Turned in. Turned over. Turned out again. Turnaround time. Turn things over. Ah, all in one job interview. And it sounded completely professional.
Because it is professional. These phrases belong in interviews. They belong in boardrooms. They belong in everyday conversation. Softly, they belong to you now. Warmly, after today, they really do. Quiz time. Claps, let's go. Listeners, fill in the blank. Say it out loud. Every time. Without fail.
Sentence one. I was really nervous about the speech, but it blank blank beautifully. Turned out. The result was beautiful, better than expected. Yes.
Perfect use. Sentence two. All reports must be blanked in by end of day Thursday. Turned in. Submitted. Handed over officially. Right. Don't miss that deadline. Please don't. Sentence three.
The new CEO completely blanked the struggling business blanked. Turned the business around. From struggling to thriving. A complete transformation.
Powerful. Sentence four. What is your standard blanked blanked for client requests? Turnaround time. How quickly can you complete it? Yes. Very professional question. Very. Last one.
She blanked the meeting blanked to her colleague who presented the findings.
Turned the meeting over. She passed the responsibility. She handed it off.
Claps, beautiful. Listeners, how did you do? Drop your score in the comments.
Five out of five? We will genuinely celebrate you. Every single one of you.
Every single one. Okay. Let's bring it home. Turned out. Something happening in a particular way. The number of people attending an event. And switching off a light. Turned in. Submitting something officially. Going to bed. And reporting someone to the authorities. Turned over.
Physically flipping something. Total revenue a company generates. Staff leaving and being replaced. And passing responsibility to someone else. Turned around. Physically facing the other direction. Completely changing a negative situation. And how quickly something gets completed. Woo, >> [sighs] >> that was a really strong episode. I'm so proud of this one.
Laura! I know, I know. Every week. Every week, I mean it.
>> [laughter] >> And honestly, I agree with you. See? Jamie gets it. I get it. Okay, before we let you go, your challenge this week, pick just two two of today's phrases and use them somewhere real. In a conversation. In an email. In a presentation. Even just say them out loud while you're making coffee. While you're on the way to work.
Wherever. Whenever. Because using a phrase even once in a real moment is worth more than reading it a hundred times. A hundred times. And come back and tell us. Drop it in the comments. I used turnaround in a real meeting. We will absolutely celebrate you. Full cheer squad. The whole squad. If today helped you, give it a like. It helps the channel so much. More than you know.
Subscribe if you haven't yet.
>> New episode every week. Share it with someone learning English. The best thing you can do for them. We genuinely mean that. All right, everyone. This has been Business English Desk. I'm Laura. I'm Jamie. And we'll see you next week. May everything turn out better than expected.
Turn in your best effort every day. Turn over a new leaf this week.
>> [laughter] >> And whatever challenge you're facing, turn it around. Bye. [music] Bye.
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