Unit 20 Visiting
Pay a visit to visit (usually by previous arrangement)
Also: call on
GRAMMAR NOTE/USAGE NOTES: Thess idioms describe more formal visits that are usually prearranged. An object can be put after the verv in pay a visit.
▪ The country doctor paid a visit to a sick patient on a distant farm.
▪ I made sure to pay Alexandra a visit when I traveled to Chicago.
▪ The salesman called on the manager at the appointed time.
Drop in (on) to visit (usually not by previous arrangement)
Also: drop by, come by, come over
USAGE NOTE: Only the main entry can be used with on, followed by the identity of the person who is visited.
▪ It’s a pleasure to see you again. Please drop in any time.
▪ When Stan dropped in on an old friend, she was quite surprised to see him.
▪ I wanted to drop by earlier, but when it got so late I decided not to come over.
▪ Why don’t you come by tonight and we’ll talk some more?
Swing by to visit (often for the prupose of getting or buying something)
Also: stop by
USAGE NOTE: These forms can also be used for informal visits (see previous entry).
▪ Why don’t you swing by my house to vorrow the tools that you need?
▪ Doreen stopped by the supermarket on her way home from work.
Stop over to visit (usually overnight)
Related form: stopover(noun meaning “short stop”)
USAGE NOTE: Both idioms usually refer to an airplane trip.
▪ On our trip north, we stopped over in San Francisco for two days.
▪ The airplane make a stopover in New York before continuting to Paris.
Get together to meet or gather for a visit
Related form: get-together(noun)
USAGE NOTE: This idiom is used for family gatherings and other group visits.
▪ All of my relatives get together at Thanksgiving for a turkey feast.
▪ If you’d like, we can have a get-together this weekend in my backyard.
Show in to guide someone idside, especially into one’s home.
Also: come on in
GRAMMAR NOTE: Show in is separable. Come on in is an invariable expression.
▪ Someone is knocking at the door. Could you show them in?
▪ Hey, Joe, I’m glad you could make it. Come on in!
make oneself at home to relax by removing one’s coat, sitting down, and getting comfortable
USAGE NOTE: This idiom is used when guests first arrive.
▪ I’m glad you could come. Please make yourself at home.
▪ Helena’s guests made themselves at home in her warm and cozy living room.
Feel at home to feel comfortable, to be relaxed
USAGE NOTE: This idiom is often used when it takes some time to feel relaxed in a ner environment.
▪ The Jognsons are good hosts. They know how to make their guests feel at home.
▪ It’s difficult to feel at home in a foreign country where you don’t speak the language.
Take a seat to sit on a couch, chair, stool, or other similar pieces of furniture
▪ Give me your coat and then take a seat in the living room. The meeting will begin soon.
Show out to guide someone out of somewhere such as one’s workplace or home
Also: see out
GRAMMAR NOTE: These idioms are separable.
▪ The zoo ranger had to show out several families that were still in the zoo when it closed.
▪ It was so nice of you to come. Let me see you out.