Introduction / Context:
Phrasal verbs combine a base verb with a particle to create idiomatic meanings. “Run out of X” means that the available supply of X has been used up or depleted. In travel narratives, it commonly refers to money, time, battery, or fuel being exhausted before the activity ends.
Given Data / Assumptions:
- Object: money during a tour.
- Phrase: “ran out of money.”
- We must choose the option that matches “supply exhausted.”
Concept / Approach:
The most accurate paraphrase is “exhausted my stock of.” “Did not have enough” can be true at the start (insufficient funds) but does not imply depletion through use. “Lost” implies misplacement or theft, which is different. “Carried a lot” is unrelated and contradictory.
Step-by-Step Solution:
1) Identify the particle meaning: out of → none remaining.2) Apply to money during travel: funds used up.3) Choose “exhausted my stock of.”4) Reject alternatives that indicate insufficiency, loss, or abundance.
Verification / Alternative check:
Substitute: “I exhausted my money on the tour.” This preserves meaning and causality (spending → depletion).
Why Other Options Are Wrong:
did not have enough: Could be initial condition, not exhaustion.lost: Different cause; implies accident/theft.carried a lot: Opposite direction; indicates abundance.
Common Pitfalls:
Confusing “ran out of” with “ran short of.” The latter means “nearly out,” while “ran out of” means “completely used up.”
Final Answer:
exhausted my stock of
Discussion & Comments