Contribute vs Pulling your weight
When to use each in English, with meaning, register, and examples.
Contribute
Top 2,000 (common)B2verb
Pulling your weight
Top 2,000 (common)
| Contribute | Pulling your weight | |
|---|---|---|
| Pronunciation | 🇬🇧 /["/kənˈtrɪbjuːt//ˈkɒntrɪbjuːt/","/kənˈtrɪbjuːts//ˈkɒntrɪbjuːts/","/kənˈtrɪbjuːtɪd//ˈkɒntrɪbjuːtɪd/","/kənˈtrɪbjuːtɪŋ//ˈkɒntrɪbjuːtɪŋ/"]/🇺🇸 /["/kənˈtrɪbjuːt/","/kənˈtrɪbjuːts/","/kənˈtrɪbjuːtɪd/","/kənˈtrɪbjuːtɪŋ/"]/ | 🇬🇧 //ˈpʊlɪŋ jʊər weɪt//🇺🇸 //ˈpʊlɪŋ jʊr weɪt// |
| Meaning | To give something, like money or help, to a cause or project. | Doing your share of work in a group. |
| Example | Everyone is encouraged to contribute to the community project. | In our team project, everyone is expected to be pulling their weight. |
| Register | Neutral | Neutral |
| How common | Top 2,000 (common) | Top 2,000 (common) |
| CEFR level | B2 | - |
| Part of speech | verb | |
| Collocations | enormously, generously, greatly, be asked to, be encouraged to, to, towards/toward, have little, a lot, etc. to contribute (to something), greatly, importantly, largely, to, regularly, to | pull your weight, not pulling your weight, expecting to pull weight |
| Antonyms | withdraw, take away, deprive | - |
| Common mistakes | Confused with 'attribute' — they have different meanings., Using 'contribute' without an object, which is incorrect., Mixing up 'contribute to' with 'contribute for' — the correct phrase is 'contribute to'. | Using 'pulling your weight' outside of group contexts., Confusing with 'pulling my leg', which means to joke., Forgetting to use it in present continuous form when needed. |
| Usage notes | Use 'contribute' when you are giving something to a group effort. It's appropriate in most contexts, both formal and informal, especially when discussing teamwork or donations. | This phrase is used in team contexts to indicate that everyone should contribute equally. It is not typically used in formal writing but is common in conversations and workplace discussions. |
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Frequently asked questions: Contribute vs Pulling your weight
What's the difference between Contribute and Pulling your weight?
Contribute: To give something, like money or help, to a cause or project. Pulling your weight: Doing your share of work in a group.
Can you show an example of each?
Contribute: Everyone is encouraged to contribute to the community project. Pulling your weight: In our team project, everyone is expected to be pulling their weight.
Can I use Contribute and Pulling your weight interchangeably?
Not always. Contribute and Pulling your weight are related and overlap in some contexts, but they differ in register, how common they are, and usage, so swapping one for another can change the meaning or tone. Check the differences above before substituting.