Example sentences of "[verb] [adv] get [adv prt] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 There is a connotation to leadership that needs perhaps getting out of the way .
2 I live in an area of high unemployment and it drives me mad when married mothers go back to work just to get out of the house .
3 ‘ We tried desperately to get out of the format of landing somewhere , splitting up , getting lost and getting captured , getting into trouble and getting out of it .
4 Before he invaded Iran in 1980 , Mr Hussein tried hard to get on with the Islamic zealots who had just seized power in Tehran .
5 Banbridge tried hard to get back into the game but Dungannon stuck again in the 75th minute when Denver beat Hanley with a neat lob to complete his hat-trick .
6 ‘ Then you 'd better get on with the job quickly . ’
7 If those trainers did n't want to end up in a splash they 'd better get out of the way before I …
8 ‘ Perhaps you 'd better get out of the City , ’ suggested Carradine .
9 ‘ I think you 'd better get out of the water .
10 A discussion in our house on ( let's say ) the necessity of buying a new fridge will move swiftly to the education system ( via the rival claim of school fees to the purchase of the fridge ) and whether a move to another area might obviate the need for paying them , taking in a quick discourse on the immorality of contributing to the divisive education system in this country anyway ; this will lead to the if-we-sold-our-suburban-villa-we-could-buy-a-Georgian-manor-house-in-the-country conversation ; which will in its turn move on quite quickly to the horrors of British Rail and the greatly increased subjection to them that such a move would entail ; then we get to leaving all our friends behind , and to debating whether having them to stay at the weekends would not be perfectly satisfactory ; which will remind us that two or more of them are coming to dinner that very night and we 'd better get down to the off-licence ; then it 's shall-we-get-Muscadet-or-the-Chardonnay- again and for-heaven's-sake-get-enough which will get us back to the fridge , on account of last time we got the Chardonnay , I did n't put it in it soon enough .
11 We said , ‘ We 'd better get back to the hotel and try to figure out this country in the morning . ’
12 ‘ Well , I 'd better get back to the hotel and pack . ’
13 ‘ As I said , I 'd better get back to the hotel .
14 ‘ We 'd better get back to the Doctor . ’
15 ‘ We 'd better get back to the Operations Room . ’
16 ‘ I 'm not sure what time he 'll be through with his meeting , but perhaps I 'd better get back to the hotel and show willing just in case he 's there . ’
17 ‘ You … you 'd better get back to the restaurant …
18 ‘ We 'd better get back in the car .
19 Louis looked as though he 'd just got up off the ground after being knocked out in a fight .
20 He and Kenneth started conversing using no fewer than five-syllable words before he 'd even got out of the car , and have been rabbiting happily like two philatelists over a rare collection .
21 She would do well to get out of the area before they turned up .
22 Such is the state of computer technology for the registration and running of club membership lists that hobby-based clubs for children or adults like this , run by publishers , could well proliferate , and lively booksellers might do well to get in on the act .
23 ‘ I really have n't had a chance to press my claims and I sincerely believe I am pushing uphill to get back into the side for a long time . ’
24 But the show was all for nothing : there were no punters out there , except for a scattering of people , hunched into anoraks , hurrying home to get out of the persistent drizzle .
25 And Chapman , 51 , was so traumatised by the experience he vowed never to get back behind the wheel , magistrates heard .
26 And you know in one week , but I 'm quite willing you know just to get on with the handicraft , but I just ca n't be committed .
27 You know never gets up in the mornings ?
28 A.Q. : Towards five-thirty this morning , having just got back from the flower market , I was working in the front quarters of my shop when I got the idea I 'd heard a funny noise just outside the window …
29 But I felt strongly that , like Dickens again , though not to the same extent , he needed occasionally to get out into the open : which is why he made his way down to Cornwall once or twice to see Ronald Duncan .
30 ‘ I 'm sorry , I think I 've rather got out of the habit of talking to people . ’
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