keep out

high frequencyGeneralHouseholdProperty

πŸ”Š Pronunciation

/kiːp aʊt/
Stress: primary stress on verb
stress pattern crucial for distinguishing from noun phrase

πŸ‘¨β€πŸ‘©β€πŸ‘§β€πŸ‘¦ Word Family

Word Class Forms
Verbs keep out, keeps out, kept out, keeping out
Nouns keepout
Adjectives kept-out
Often appears in compound signs and notices

πŸ“ Phrasal Verb Structure

Base verb: keepParticle: out
Transitivity: both

πŸ“– Meanings

Meaning 1

prevent entry or access
Formal equivalent: exclude, bar

LITERAL

“Keep out of my room!”
“The fence keeps animals out of the garden.”
“They kept the protesters out of the building.”

Meaning 2

avoid involvement or participation
Formal equivalent: avoid, abstain

ABSTRACT

“I try to keep out of their arguments.”
“She keeps out of office politics.”
“Best to keep out of trouble.”

⚠️ Separability Rules

Rule: OPTIONALLY SEPARABLE

Pronoun Placement

βœ“ keep them out
❌ keep out them

πŸ’‘ Think of it Like This

Imagine a boundary or barrier that maintains separation
Memory aid: Think of a 'KEEP OUT' sign on a fence
Common on private property signs in English-speaking countries

πŸ“ Usage Patterns

Grammatical Contexts

Imperative: “Keep out!”
Continuous: “The fence is keeping intruders out”
Perfect: “The lock has kept thieves out”
Passive: “Unauthorized personnel must be kept out”
Modal: “You should keep out of this”
Question: “How do we keep mice out?”
Negative: “Don't keep out the fresh air”

Common in:

securityprivacyboundariesavoiding conflict

⚠️ Common Errors

❌ keep out themβ†’βœ“ keep them out
pronoun placement error
Common for: languages without separable phrasal verbs

High impact

❌ keep away from troublesβ†’βœ“ keep out of trouble
wrong particle/preposition combination
❌ maintain outβ†’βœ“ keep out
literal translation from Romance languages
❌ keep out the itβ†’βœ“ keep it out
article with pronoun
❌ exclude yourself from this matter (too formal)β†’βœ“ keep out of this
register mismatch

πŸ“Š Register & Alternatives

Formality: neutral

Single-verb alternatives

Formal: exclude, prohibit, prevent entry
Neutral: block, ban
Informal: shut out
Use phrasal verb: everyday conversation and instructions
Use single verb: formal documents and legal contexts

🌍 Etymology

Origin: Old English 'cΔ“pan' (to take notice) + 'Ε«t' (out)