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I overheard my manager asking "What are you up to?"

What does that idiom mean? Is it an informal/negative way of asking??

5 Answers5

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"What are you up to?" means

"What have you been doing lately?".

If you add an adverb to the end of the phrase, for instance,

"What are you up to tonight?" or "What are you up to this summer?"

it can be interpreted as

"What are you planning to do tonight?" or "What are you planning to do this summer?".

Noldorin
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Can I also add that the intention should be determined by the tone the person uses when asking. If they are asking it in a light hearted open way, they genuinely want to know what you are doing (at the moment or a later point in time).

If there appears to be suspicion in their tone, they may be implying that you are "up to" something you shouldn't be and should stop.

A common phrase is "are you up to mischief?” which means "are doing something naughty, you shouldn't be"?

sturner
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    I think this distinction is important and salient and I'm really surprised the checkmark went to answer that didn't even mention this. – Ben Lee Mar 30 '12 at 18:53
  • +1 for first two paragraphs, but no one ever says "are you up to mischief?" – endolith Oct 14 '18 at 19:13
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"What are you up to?"

                = "What do you intend to do?" 

                = "What are you willing to do?"

And about it being formal or not, as far as I know, it is more friendly than formal.

Dia
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It means, 'What are you doing?' and is similar to the phrase, 'He's up to something'. Yes, it is generally informal.

J D OConal
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    I'd add that if you say that someone is "up to something", it generally insinuates that they're "up to no good", or some kind of mischief... – Benjol Sep 14 '10 at 05:10
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    Indeed, "What are you up to?" might have this sense - it depends on the tone. But without the emphasis, I don't think there will usually be any negative connotation. – Colin Fine Sep 14 '10 at 16:34
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Another example of a phrasal verb -- see Why do we use 'up' as adverbs for verbs? for more information.

Antony Quinn
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