Learn English – If ‘get ready’ is not proper here, what should it be

indian-englishphrase-requestterminology

In Indian dialect, the commonest phrase you find among us is get ready when we have plan to go out. It does not matter whether we are going to party, movie, outside eating or whatever… if we are going out of the home, we use this phrase to tell a person that they should get ready by…

  1. putting up good attire
  2. wear some accessories
  3. do some makeup to look good
  4. whatever it takes to go out comfortably

get ready, in Indian English will include everything that I mentioned and if you tell this phrase to any Indian while going out, he or she will understand that.

Since I'm keen to learn neutral English I found that get ready is not exactly what we understand. Also, natives tell this way – get ready for the [reason -say party] which makes better sense but then that's not the case. It's just outing and get ready for outing will mean something else and not putting up dress and ..till 4th point.

Is there any term/phrase that will convey this message. I don't want to use get ready for this after learning the meaning of get ready from here, here, and here.

What natives practice makes utter sense get ready for but then in my case as I described, it won't make much sense (get ready for restaurant! get ready for the beach!..and so on…)

Again, to clarify, we use get ready in this way…

"Okay, I'm bored; and we are going out. I don't know where but somewhere to unwind.
(After 30 minutes; to my wife) "Ah, what are you doing? get ready…fast."And, she would understand all those 4 points up there!

Best Answer

I'm a native speaker, and we use "get ready" in exactly the way you describe.

Even though we sometimes qualify the phrase by saying: Get ready for [some event], that "for" clause can be omitted when the listener already knows where we are going. In other words, although get ready can mean different things in different contexts, I can still usually say:

C'mon! We're leaving! You need to get ready!

and that will be understood to mean: put your shoes on, brush your teeth, comb your hair and look presentable, etc.

The precise meaning get ready will vary, depending on where we are going. So long as the hearer knows where we are going, I don't need to add the, say, for your piano practice. For example, I have teenagers at home, so, for me, it works very much like this:

what "get ready" means

10 or 15 years ago, though, whenever I said, "Let's get ready" to my wife, that always included "Make sure we have the diaper bag!"

You needn't worry about get ready being misconstrued to mean "brace yourself for some bad news" or "get into your starting blocks." Those are very specialized meanings that people wouldn't even think about, unless they were in a situation where that would be the meaning that makes the most sense.

For example, if you wanted your picture taken, and I was holding your camera, I might say, "Get ready..." – which doesn't mean, "go put on your shoes," or, "brace yourself for some bad news." It simply means, "Get ready, I'm going to snap the picture now" – so you should probably just give me your best smile.

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