Example sentences of "get out [prep] the [adj] " in BNC.

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1 They had doubled back and got out of the single-leaf door of the car .
2 Could you then have got out of the black hole with the remaining extra stage ? ’
3 When the explosions eased off a bit , I bade farewell to Pat and got out of the big house as quickly as possible .
4 ‘ I must have got out of the wrong side of the bed , ’ Beck said .
5 As she passed Veronica 's house , she noticed that one of the men had got out of the green Maestro and was making his way round the back of the building .
6 ‘ You have never got out of the childish habit of trying to do several things at once , ’ Sally had said to her once ; Sally , so cool , so contained , so efficient she sometimes made Harriet feel as if she were still a child , though of course she would never admit it .
7 She wanted to rush to the door and get out into the open air again before she suffocated .
8 Gradually I get out of the unscientific habit of trying to read other people 's faces , and come to see the bodies from which personality has faded as the automata which for scientific explanation they already are .
9 Politicians are n't going to stick their necks out to help break up the various logjams unless we 're shouting and yelling at them from the bank — for the most part to encourage them , but also to warn them of dire consequences to come if they get out of the hot water before the job is done .
10 Instead of a young person being sentenced to a period in custody , which means that it is all too likely that he or she will continue in a life of crime , become a professional criminal and never get out of the criminal world , the alternative makes both moral and economic sense .
11 get out of the cold and have a hot drink .
12 Get out of the fucking way .
13 ‘ It 's not fucking lover-boy , dear , now get out of the fucking bath and do as you 're told and you wo n't get hurt . ’
14 Get out in the fresh air . ’
15 So we get two things , we get a very good new personality , and secondly , an intelligent personality , and , therefore , and this is an important part of the strategy , she gets out of the other archaeologists she 's talking to a much higher level of interaction and intellectual interchange than she would if she were simply a standard presenter .
16 However the players are getting out of the losing habit .
17 Getting out in the open air on a bike can be an exhilarating experience .
18 When we got out into the open sea beyond the fiord , we began to see more auks , mainly Brüinnich 's guillemots and little auks , and a lot more fulmar flying around .
19 ‘ I 'm happy ’ , ‘ I 'm settled ’ , ‘ Now I know what it feels like ’ , ‘ I got out on the right side ’ .
20 I think he got out of the flat first and not out of debt .
21 On one occasion , the Tsar got out of the Imperial train for a stroll at Binul Station and the train left without him .
22 But once I got out of the splitting shop out into the dry , handling leather rather than skins , er it were terrific , absolutely terrific .
23 Shortly after midday the train reached Llangynog , where the passengers got out onto the new station platform .
24 And they got out at the very top . ’
25 They would drink that in some of these pubs and , of course , as soon as they got out in the fresh air , it hit them and they were away .
26 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 .
27 You ought to get out into the fresh air like Enfield and me …
28 She had to get out into the fresh air .
29 ‘ But I wanted to get out into the commercial world .
30 The teacher expressed concern that , although he could write quite well in English , he only did so when writing collaboratively with his friend ( who was absent ) ; she thought that collaboration might be becoming an avoidance strategy , to get out of the frustrating task of attempting to write in English .
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