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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 And it does me good to get out of the house .
2 Each time firing occurs close at hand , we all get down into the ditch — this adds to the pain and discomfort of the wounded .
3 Times when we all get down in the dumps , but God can always reach deep within us and put us back on our feet again .
4 We both got out of the jeep as fast as we could and sprinted in the direction of the slit trenches .
5 He had never found it easy to get up in the morning , and being under sentence of death did not make the prospect of a new day any more enticing .
6 ‘ So is it safe to get out of the bag now ? ’
7 Even then she had found it difficult to get up in the morning , had begged and pleaded to be allowed to lie in a little longer , had gone back to sleep more often than not , the forerunner , Cecilia supposed , of her present practice of often lying in bed till noon .
8 Dorothy had already told Isobel of the conversation that afternoon , so she was prepared ; but he found it difficult to get round to the real object of the visit .
9 Some have worked abroad as volunteers , on extended vacations or in casual jobs , and have then found it difficult to get back into the mainstream of a career .
10 A partner may hate feeling dependent , but still find it difficult to get out of the house and mix with strangers .
11 The reason for using cold water is that hot water will make the blood congeal and make it harder to get out of the needle and syringe .
12 Apart from that initial glimpse of them both getting out of the car , I literally have no image of her at all .
  Next page