A1 verb Neutral #38 más común

leave

/liːv/

depart

Ejemplos

3 de 5
1

I leave the house at 8:00 AM every morning.

I leave the house at 8:00 AM every morning.

2

Please leave your contact details with the receptionist.

Please leave your contact details with the receptionist.

3

I have to leave now, see you later!

I have to leave now, see you later!

Sinónimos

Antónimos

Familia de palabras

Sustantivo
leave
Verb
leave
Adjetivo
left
Relacionado
leaving
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Truco para recordar

Think of the LEAVES falling off a tree; they are LEAVING the branches.

Quiz rápido

What time do you usually ___ for work in the morning?

¡Correcto!

La respuesta correcta es: leave

Ejemplos

1

I leave the house at 8:00 AM every morning.

everyday

I leave the house at 8:00 AM every morning.

2

Please leave your contact details with the receptionist.

formal

Please leave your contact details with the receptionist.

3

I have to leave now, see you later!

informal

I have to leave now, see you later!

4

Students must leave the exam room quietly after finishing.

academic

Students must leave the exam room quietly after finishing.

5

He decided to leave the company to start his own business.

business

He decided to leave the company to start his own business.

Sinónimos

Antónimos

Familia de palabras

Sustantivo
leave
Verb
leave
Adjetivo
left
Relacionado
leaving

Colocaciones comunes

leave home To depart from one's house.
leave work To finish the working day.
leave a message To give information for someone when they are not there.
leave early To depart before the scheduled time.
leave a tip To give extra money for service.

Frases Comunes

leave someone alone

To stop bothering someone.

leave it at that

To stop doing or discussing something further.

leave behind

To forget to bring something with you.

Se confunde a menudo con

leave vs live

'Live' refers to residing or being alive, while 'leave' refers to departing.

leave vs let

'Let' means to allow, while 'leave' means to depart or cause to remain.

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Notas de uso

'Leave' is an irregular verb (leave, left, left). It can be used as a transitive verb with an object or as an intransitive verb alone.

⚠️

Errores comunes

Learners often confuse 'leave' with 'go'. Remember: you 'leave a place' (no preposition), but you 'go to a place'.

💡

Truco para recordar

Think of the LEAVES falling off a tree; they are LEAVING the branches.

📖

Origen de la palabra

From Old English 'læfan', meaning to remain, bequeath, or let stay.

Patrones gramaticales

Irregular verb forms: leave (present), left (past), left (past participle). Can be followed by a destination using 'for': leave for London. Present participle: leaving.
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Contexto cultural

In many Western cultures, 'leaving a tip' in a restaurant is expected as part of the service interaction.

Quiz rápido

What time do you usually ___ for work in the morning?

¡Correcto!

La respuesta correcta es: leave

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