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

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1 Straightaway Steve got on to Malcolm and told him they needed all this money to join up with Scientology .
2 Saw another social worker who got on to housing .
3 Bloom got on to me and said he had received a letter from this young .
4 At one stage she somehow got on to the subject of coal and said she simply did not believe it came from wood .
5 She added : ‘ When he eventually got on to the train he left the bird on a seat next to his cabin .
6 They got on to the airfield that night and started to place their bombs , but as the aircraft were widely dispersed , this took time in the dark .
7 We got on to the LRDG ration scale which was different from the rest of the army .
8 They got on to the field without difficulty in the middle of a bombing raid by the RAF on Benghazi , and sat there while their leader gave them a lecture on deer-stalking in the Highlands .
9 Yet nothing had changed since , and his worry now was not for the competition , but for what lay beyond , what would happen to Firelight when he left school in the summer and joined the ranks of the unemployed or , with doubtful luck , got on to his father 's building site .
10 Recently , we were having a debate in the Lords and we got on to nationalization and I said that one thing that we need to nationalize in this country is the Treasury , but nobody has ever succeeded .
11 On Monday , the first day of the fair , Mum took me down to The Market Place after school and , armed with my fare , I got on to the children 's roundabout .
12 Terry got on to it through Amnesty International .
13 I waited for three buses to go past before I got on to one .
14 We got on to dreams because Vern 's interested in them too .
15 When pressed as to why he thought this was , he got on to what I later found was a cause he would die for .
16 Conversation , not only on that day , got on to An Adventure and would not easily get off it , though we wished to be speaking of other things .
17 Before they got on to the subject of the commune they had been discussing which item of Hilbert 's former property they should sell next .
18 Leaving Sagaing for our return journey by boat to Prome we got on to a sandbank and had to wait there until two tugs pulled us off .
19 I paced the house for an hour or so and then got on to the council office .
20 I got on to the roof : the upper levels of mortar had crumbled so much that it was doubtful if the stack would survive the next gale .
21 ‘ Aye ; well ’ — he got on to his feet now — ‘ it takes somebody to expose it .
22 Cecilia got on to the platform .
23 Luckily , however , I managed to hold on and we got on to her bed , which I seem to remember was covered with a plastic sheet .
24 Then I got on to James again . "
25 Did n't you even got on to frogs and rabbits ?
26 He got on to his knees , then rose in a crouch and hit Pascoe full on the chest with a tight fist .
27 Pascoe got on to his knees like a man at prayer , and hauled Singer towards him by his hair , punching twice , hard , as he pulled the man in .
28 I was outraged by it and got on to Smith at once , saying that on no account should the students be flogged and that if the sentence was carried out I would leave immediately .
29 One after the other , Nat , Aldo , Jimmy and Ben got on to their bikes and rode off .
30 And then I got on to the , I was convenor of the housing allocation committee for very many years .
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