Sweep, sweep up, sweep out. Each sweep should count for one, but the overall effect can vary between the two.

How can I sweep up only all objects? What is the difference between sweep up and sweep out?

  1. All these shards here Somebody’s going to have to sweep up somebody’s

  2. going to have to win out this room, there are shards all over the place.

How can sweep up be used only to mean “sweep” without mentioning the place or object? What is the sweep out?

My ring was unborrowable. It turned out to be gold. What about this gold ring?

Asked on March 4, 2021 in Other.
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1 Answer(s)

If you just use “sweep” alone it obviously implies that you are going to clean something, it just doesn’t deal with the details of exactly how you are going to dispose of the dust or dirt after you’ve swept it.

Do you think a household should sweep all dust out of a place? Here is an example of a horse’s stable. What’s rolled out of the stable? After I swept out the stable and I was getting the straw back when I sucked out the stable. Will you really be able to go upstairs tonight?

If you sweep up dirt, maybe by sweeping it into one place to vacuum rather than putting the dirt in a dustpan, and perhaps at the other end, into a dander basin, then sweep the dirt up.

Is the name of one of the different regional used examples idiomatic? Why or why not? How do you wash up your clothes?

Answered on March 4, 2021.
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