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October 10, 2025 1 min
Hey there! It’s Michael here — and welcome back to another Happy English, Phrasal Verb Friday.
I’m here every Friday with a quick, one-point English lesson to help you learn a new phrasal verb and sound more natural when you speak.

Today’s phrasal verb is crank out. When you crank something out, it means you produce it quickly, often in large amounts. This phrase is often used for things like writing, work, or manufacturing — anything that can be produced at a fast pace, sometimes with a focus on quantity over quality.
  • The factory in the next town cranks out thousands of sneakers every week.
  • My friend Amanda writes for a travel blog, and last week she cranked out five articles in just two days!
  • And I remember when I was in college — we all cranked out our final papers right before the deadline. Typical, right?

And hey, here’s a little pronunciation tip: crank out… crank-out. The K at the end of crank links smoothly into the O of out. Crank-out.

So how about you? What’s something you’ve cranked out lately — work, content, projects, maybe a bunch of emails? Leave a comment, and don’t forget to follow or subscribe so you don’t miss the next
Happy English Podcast and next week’s Phrasal Verb Friday. Thanks for listening — and until next time, keep learning and keep it cool.

Join my Podcast Learner's Study Group here: https://www.myhappyenglish.com/plsg
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:02):
Hey there, it's Michael here and welcome back to another
happy English frasal verb Friday. I'm here every Friday with
a quick one point English lesson to help you learn
a new phrasal verb and sound more natural when you speak.
Today's phrasal verb is crank out. When you crank something out,

(00:27):
it means you produce it quickly, often in large amounts.
This phrase is used for things like writing, work or
manufacturing anything that can be produced at a fast pace,
sometimes with a focus on quantity over quality. For example,

(00:47):
the factory in the next town cranks out thousands of
sneakers every week. My friend Amanda writes for a travel
blog and last week she cranked out five r goals
in just two days. And I remember when I was
in college, we all cranked out our final papers right

(01:08):
before the deadline. Typical, right. And Hey, here's a little
pronunciation tip, crank out, crank out. The K at the
end of crank links smoothly to the oh of out
crank out. So how about you. What's something you've cranked

(01:30):
out lately? Work, content projects, maybe a bunch of emails,
Leave a comment, and don't forget to follow or subscribe.
So you don't miss the next Happy English podcast and
next week's phraseal Verb Friday. Hey, thanks for listening, and
until next time, keep learning and keep it cool.
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