student asking question

What's "trade in" mean and is it different from saying just "trade?"

teacher

Native speaker’s answer

Rebecca

That's a good point! In the commercial context, "trade in" is a phrasal verb related to "trade," and it means to exchange something used in as a partial payment for something else. So it is a bit different from simply "trade" on its own. In this context, "trade in" has been used here to make it a bit more casual - there is no huge difference between using "in" or not here, the meaning of this sentence does not change very much. Ex: I'd like to trade in this phone for a new one. Ex: I traded in my free time in exchange for financial freedom.

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