keep on

high frequencyGeneralBusinessAcademic

πŸ”Š Pronunciation

/kiːp Ι’n/
Stress: primary stress on 'keep'
stress pattern remains consistent across all forms

πŸ‘¨β€πŸ‘©β€πŸ‘§β€πŸ‘¦ Word Family

Word Class Forms
Verbs keep on, keeps on, kept on, keeping on
Primarily used as verb only, no derived forms

πŸ“ Phrasal Verb Structure

Base verb: keepParticle: on
Transitivity: both

πŸ“– Meanings

Meaning 1

to continue doing something without stopping
Formal equivalent: continue, persist

SEMI-LITERAL

“He kept on working despite feeling tired”
“The rain kept on falling all day”
“Just keep on trying and you'll succeed”

Meaning 2

to repeatedly do something (often annoying)
Formal equivalent: persist, repeat

ABSTRACT

“She keeps on asking the same question”
“The dog kept on barking all night”

⚠️ Separability Rules

Rule: INSEPARABLE

Pronoun Placement

βœ“ keep on doing it
❌ keep it on

πŸ’‘ Think of it Like This

Think of a path or journey that continues forward
Memory aid: Visualize walking 'on' a path that never ends
Reflects English-speaking cultures' value of persistence

πŸ“ Usage Patterns

Grammatical Contexts

Imperative: “Keep on working!”
Continuous: “He was keeping on working”
Perfect: “She has kept on trying”
Passive: “not commonly used in passive”
Modal: “You should keep on practicing”
Question: “Why do you keep on doing that?”
Negative: “Don't keep on complaining”

Common in:

persistencerepetitioncontinuous action

⚠️ Common Errors

❌ He keeps working onβ†’βœ“ He keeps on working
Particle placement error
Common for: languages with different particle positions

Medium – sounds unnatural impact

❌ Keep it on doingβ†’βœ“ Keep on doing it
Incorrect pronoun placement
❌ He kept to workβ†’βœ“ He kept on working
Direct translation from Romance languages
❌ She keeps on to studyβ†’βœ“ She keeps on studying
Wrong verb form after phrasal verb
❌ I keep on with studyβ†’βœ“ I keep on studying
Incorrect complementation pattern

πŸ“Š Register & Alternatives

Formality: neutral

Single-verb alternatives

Formal: continue, persist, maintain
Neutral: continue
Informal: keep at it
Use phrasal verb: casual conversation, informal writing
Use single verb: formal academic writing, legal documents

🌍 Etymology

Origin: Combination of Old English 'cΔ“pan' (keep) + directional particle 'on'