{{Grammar Box}} {{AKA|离合词 (líhécí)|verb-object phrase}} "Separable verbs" get their name from their ability to "separate" into two parts (a [[verb]] part and an [[object]] part), with other words in between. In fact, you could also simply call separable verbs "verb-object [[phrase]]s." == What They Are == Purely from the "separable" aspect, Mandarin's separable verbs have a counterpart in English: phrasal verbs (also called two-word verbs). While the grammatical components of English's phrasal verbs are different, the "separable" quality works in a very similar way. Take the phrasal verb "check out" for example: * '''Check out''' my new computer. * '''Check''' my new computer '''out'''. Do you see what happened there? The verb "check out" can split into two parts (a ''verb'' and a ''preposition''), and other words can go in between those two parts. Separable verbs work much the same way in Chinese, except that the two parts are a ''verb'' and an ''object'' (a noun). Let's look at a typical example in Chinese, using the verb 见面, meaning "to meet."