Ethan
What's the difference between "I am saving to buy..."and "I am saving up to buy..."? Does "up" have any meaning following verbs? I see a lot of verbs go together with "up"
Mar 16, 2019 8:35 AM
Answers · 5
2
"Save UP" is a phrasal verb, so you might want to consider it a single unit. To "save up" implies that you're saving, or putting aside, and not spending money deliberately, for a purpose to buy something. If you didn't have a target or a purpose, you could just say that you're saving money. Examples: I don't eat out, I'm trying to save money = I don't want to spend money on restaurants, it's expensive, I eat at home. I'm saving up for a new iPhone = I'm putting money aside deliberately to buy an iphone in the future. I have a purpose. On the other hand, "UP" following a verb conveys the meaning that something must be finished or done completely. I've cleared UP my room (there's no rubbish or dirt in it anymore). I ate UP the pizza (I ate the last piece). I'll settle UP with you next week (I'll return you all the money you've lended me).
March 16, 2019
1
Save up means exactly the same thing as to save. Don't worry about the difference because there is no difference.
March 16, 2019
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