Example sentences of "[conj] [pron] get in " in BNC.

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1 Products tend to be misplaced or even completely lost or they get in the way but somehow they never happen to be available when wanted .
2 There are so many colourful characters within the jazz spectrum and as a form it really demands that you get in touch with your own personal self ; if you do n't have your own sound in jazz then basically it 's nothing .
3 Using CD-Roms will save us around £120,000 a year and that does n't include the added value that you get in terms of sound and pictures , ’ says Mr Wakeley .
4 Now this is for the dog daisies that you get in er hedgerows .
5 Well you can get them in the financial press , erm usually the Telegraph on a , on a weekend or the Money Mail or the , any of the loca any good quality paper , or you can buy some of the financial guides that you get in er , in er newsagents these days .
6 Er and similarly the syntax of languages are often said to be oppressive of women , a lot of the way that language is structured and a lot of the words that you get in a language , that 's another thing that 's said .
7 A small orchestra was playing ‘ Lights of Moscow ’ and the waiters were clattering metal dishes and semaphoring with table napkins , and there was the air of subdued hysteria that you get in a big theatre when the orchestra is tuning up .
8 It is true to say there is n't the same direct relation between child numbers and spending on children 's services that you get in education .
9 that both Gethwyn and Russell sorted out er who up on on those extremes that you get in a group that , that maybe feel they re that they really have nothing to , hardly anything to do with us they 've do n't receive ministry and why should that be , and after be asked each year , has to go up ?
10 The sort of stuff that you get in in y'know sort of everyday gossip between friends about y'know when people talk about each- other , oh I think he 's a bit er I think he 's a bit camp , or I think he probably is but erm yeah yeah all that kind of thing yeah erm is is like the the informal repertoire , the informal repertoire that you do between friends erm , between people to whom it sort of y'know it 's not very important if you give them the wrong impression sort of thing .
11 Also , primary schools are more adaptable erm they have n't got the constraints ; they have n't got the syllabuses to get through ; they have n't got exams at the end of the year ; they have n't got to the sort of subject departmentalization that you get in a secondary school .
12 Equally erm , and this is a kind of aside , there 's the problem for the newcomer of not knowing how the flats Where , you know where each flat , where each block is , so you get in there and you and you 're trying to find , for example , or wherever , and you have n't got a clue , sort of where to start
13 Once you get in the habit of really noticing what you eat , and expecting from the restaurants the same care for quality and ‘ real food ’ value you try to achieve at home , making the healthy choice becomes second nature .
14 once you get in bed you 'll be like
15 It 's alright for you to lie to us as many times as you want but when we 'd asked you once you get in a mood and walk off and do n't talk to us .
16 No wear erm wear yeah wear a tight dress and once you get in there so many other people are wearing exactly the same thing
17 And I think you 'll agree , it is a difficult I mean I always stress this point about attitude , that a lot of problems that we get in our advice centres have been made worse because the customer has caused er you know argument or a scene
18 we 've got two subcontractors that we get in touch with , they just do it and then bill owes and then we uplift it
19 In training though you can still have the same problem erm you know perhaps towards the end of the session you 've probably seen it as and I , I 'm guilty of it myself cos we 're trying to rap on through it as quickly as possible so we get in ya way by six o'clock or that so we break all the rules late in the day
20 We went in and we paid seven pounds for me and my mum to get in , we did n't pay for the kids cos if they know they 're gon na sit on your lap , they get in there for nothing , but once we get in there we give them their own chair anyway , providing you go in like it 's not in the first week , the following week when the show is quieter and not so many people going
21 Mind you it was only their wages are only comparable to say some wages that they get in nuclear power station .
22 Well well once they get in here
23 Says Mrs Cunningham : ‘ Once they get in the playground the children seem to reel off the jokes non-stop .
24 Says Mrs Cunningham : ‘ Once they get in the playground the children seem to reel off the jokes non-stop .
25 Says Mrs Cunningham : ‘ Once they get in the playground the children seem to reel off the jokes non-stop .
26 If I get in her way , she 'll kill me , if necessary .
27 if I , if I get in touch with them then I 'll
28 I 'd never been in a helicopter in my life ; you think , ‘ This is alright , ’ until you get in the bloody thing !
29 I mean , the light coming from them would be bent — as if it had gone through crinkly glass — like you get in bathroom windows .
30 Well it was also how they distributed it as well cos it need n't necessarily just be the cadres , it was du n no there 's a scene where they the house , like you get in a queue take what you want
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