Learn English – what does ”pull down on” mean

meaningmeaning-in-contextprepositions

It's an announcement in an airplane

''In the unlikely event of a water landing, place the life jacket over
your head, fasten the straps at the front, and pull them tight. Do not
inflate the jacket inside the aircraft. As you leave the aircraft,
pull down on the red tabs to inflate the vest.''

what does it mean?

why is it using ''pull down on the red tabs'' not ''pull down the red tabs''?

Best Answer

To "pull something" usually means to pull it and cause it to move in the direction pulled. To "pull on something" means to exert pressure on it in that direction, but it doesn't necessarily mean that the object actually moves.

For example if someone says "I pulled the lever down," one would assume that they pulled the lever and caused it to move down. If they said "I pulled down on the lever," it could mean that they pulled the lever in a downward direction, but the lever failed to move.

Generally speaking, the "on" is usually not necessary, as pulling something can also mean exerting pressure without causing something to move, as in:

I pulled the handle but the door didn't open.

or

I pulled on the handle but the door didn't open.

However, when you want to indicate that the object was moved, it's best not to use "on."

I pulled the box across the room

One would interpret this as saying that the box was moved across the room by pulling.

I pulled on the box across the room.

This sentence sounds unnatural, because it could mean that the person exerted pressure on the box in different locations across the room, but it doesn't imply that the pulling caused the box to move across the room.

In your example, the announcement is instructing passengers to pull the red tabs in a downward direction in order to cause the vest to inflate, even if the red tabs don't seem to actually move down permanently.

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