Example sentences of "he got on " in BNC.
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1 | When he got on as a substitute against Sweden he was first class ; in Albania he was one of our best players . ’ |
2 | As he got on , and less nervous , the words came easily ; and then he began to dislike being restricted by a written text and to prefer headings . |
3 | ‘ It really is time he got on with running his own business and let us run ours . |
4 | In spite of that , he got on well with Tanning , whom he found a ‘ nice woman ’ , and with the man who shared her studio , always painting away while John was there . |
5 | He got on quite well with Jazz . |
6 | When pressed as to why he thought this was , he got on to what I later found was a cause he would die for . |
7 | He got on with the job . |
8 | Ryan , who gave Johanna a pair of satin pyjamas for Christmas , said they often went to the seaside at Great Yarmouth together and he got on well with her parents . |
9 | Whatever the business at hand was , he got on with it , rather as if you poured Draino into a sink . |
10 | He obviously misses the lads because he got on so well with them . ’ |
11 | He got on with everybody — including me , to whom he remarked with his easy chuckle , ‘ Here 's to ye , Kit ! |
12 | He got on very well with the patients , and made them laugh without taking umbrage when they laughed at him . |
13 | ‘ Aye ; well ’ — he got on to his feet now — ‘ it takes somebody to expose it . |
14 | Meanwhile he got on with what he found inside the citadel . |
15 | In private he got on very well with Lloyd George , but he never hid his doubts ; in 1917 he told Unionists that Lloyd George was a man who has the defects of his qualities " , and told his audience that he was saying no more than he had told the Prime Minister to his face ; when in 1920 he was told that Unionists would rather hear him attack Lloyd George than defend him , he told this story to the Prime Minister too . |
16 | At Lehmann 's Minton met Christopher Isherwood with whom he got on well . |
17 | Born in Aberdeen , he got on well with Colquhoun and MacBryde , was physically the smallest of all Minton 's boyfriends , but also the most aggressive ; after his periods of leave Minton often had a black eye . |
18 | He got on to his knees , then rose in a crouch and hit Pascoe full on the chest with a tight fist . |
19 | ‘ Pempie and he got on . ’ |
20 | But then he got on with it . |
21 | He got on really well with Louis you know . |
22 | While sheet B was being printed off — from two formes , inner B and outer B — the compositor prepared the next two formes , inner and outer C , with another two sets of running titles ; then he got on with something else . |
23 | He got on to the internal phone and asked for petty cash , not specifying any amount . |
24 | But there was a living to be made in comedy which he still did so well and he got on with it . |
25 | He knew the man would be magnificent when he got on to the stage that night . |
26 | I think he got on er , quite well down there , because he 'd spent a few days up here he had a better idea of what he wanted to ask , and what he wanted to talk about and so on , but erm , only because his deadline 's and |
27 | And then he got on to explain what the items were , seventy five percent of the items went next day , and ninety thousand went , I 'm sorry , and er , and twenty five percent went two day , three day , and if you divide one into the other , what it means is that two point one consignments two me , sorry , two point one items per consignment went Express , and six items per consignment , general . |
28 | He got on very well with all the nationalities there . |
29 | The referee 's got a job to do , and he got on with it . ’ |
30 | well you know what he did , on Monday morning he was in the garage when he suddenly made up his mind to com to walk across to the paper shop to get a paper and he had n't got er a jacket or any thing on , all he got on was a pull over |