Part 1: The “Lazy” Grammar of Casual English
In almost every phrase on your list, the speaker has removed the Subject (I, you, it) and the Helping Verb (am, is, are, do).
Example: “You up?”
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Formal: “Are you awake?”
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Casual: “Are you up?”
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Natural/Lazy: “You up?”
Example: “Made it home?”
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Formal: “Did you make it home?”
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Natural/Lazy: “Made it home?”
The Rule: If the context is clear, you can drop the start of the sentence. This creates a relaxed, friendly tone used with friends, family, and close colleagues.
Part 2: Categorizing the 20 Phrases
To learn these effectively, let’s group them by their intent.
1. Checking In (The “Status Update”)
These are used to see how someone is doing or if they have finished a task.
| Phrase | Meaning | Context |
| 1. You up? | Are you awake? | Texting someone early in the morning. |
| 3. Made it home? | Did you arrive safely? | Checking on a friend after a night out. |
| 5. All set? | Are you ready or finished? | Asking if someone is ready to leave the house. |
| 11. Still there? | Are you still on the line? | Used during a phone call or long text pause. |
| 18. You finished? | Have you completed the task? | Asking a peer if they are done with a report. |
2. Social Starters & Work Talk
These help keep a conversation moving or check on progress.
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“What’s going on?” (#2): A casual way to say “Hello” or “What are you doing?”
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Response: “Nothing exciting” (Meaning: My life is quiet right now).
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“How’s work?” (#17): A standard small-talk question.
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Response: “Keeping me busy” (A polite way to say you are working hard).
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“What’s the update?” (#14): Very common in office settings.
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Response: “We’re on track” (Everything is going according to plan).
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3. Decisions & Coordination
Use these when you are planning something or need to confirm a choice.
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“Sound good?” (#7): Does this plan work for you?
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“You coming along?” (#16): Are you joining us?
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Response: “I’ll tag along” (A great idiom meaning: I will join you, even if I’m not the leader of the group).
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“That okay with you?” (#19): Asking for permission or agreement.
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Response: “I’m cool with it” (I agree/I don’t mind).
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Part 3: Deep Dive into Key Idioms
There are a few phrases in your list that use “Colloquialisms” (slang or informal expressions) that might be confusing:
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“Starving” (#4): This literally means “dying of hunger,” but in English, we use it any time we are very hungry.
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“I’ll manage” (#8): This means “I can handle this by myself.” It’s a way of politely declining help.
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“Need backup?” (#10): “Backup” means help or support. This is often used in sports or high-stress work environments.
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“What’s the rush?” (#9): Why are you moving so fast?
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Note: “I’m running late” is the most common way to say you are behind schedule.
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“Let’s figure it out” (#20): This is a proactive, positive way to say “Let’s find a solution together.”
Part 4: Pronunciation & “Flow”
In these phrases, intonation is more important than grammar.
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Rising Intonation: For questions like “You up? ↗” or “All set? ↗”, your voice should go up at the end.
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The “I’m” contraction: Notice how often “I am” becomes “I’m.” Never say “I am cool with it” in a casual setting; it sounds like a robot! Always say “I’m cool with it.”
Part 5: Practice Exercise
Try to match the scenario to the phrase from your list:
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Scenario: You see your coworker looking stressed with a mountain of paperwork.
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What do you say? (“Need backup?”)
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Scenario: You suggested going to pizza for dinner, and you want to know if your friend likes the idea.
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What do you say? (“Sound good?”)
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Scenario: You are about to leave for a movie and your friend is still putting on their shoes.
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What do you say? (“All set?”)
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Summary Table for Quick Review
| If you want to ask… | Use this phrase: |
| If they are hungry | “You hungry?” |
| If they are certain | “You sure?” |
| Why they are moving fast | “What’s the rush?” |
| If they want to talk | “Can we talk?” |
| If they can handle a task | “You got this?” |