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

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1 Moreover , most users saw the centres as somewhere to go to get out of the house rather than somewhere to learn .
2 Slowly Georg got out of the van , looked around to make sure there was no-one who knew him , then he walked quickly across to the station restaurant , entered , and hid himself quickly in a booth that had a view of the rails .
3 ‘ Now that has been reached , he will only want to get on with the future . ’
4 ‘ We very much want to get on with the renovating it . ’
5 He would have liked to give more information , ask someone to research the final days of the tsar ; but he knew that would only have got back to the KGB , and in this game secrecy was the only key he held .
6 Of course now it 's warm enough to start getting out in the garden , what could be better than to take a selection of water toys to play with in the paddling pool outside ?
7 They had a restaurant in Paris and suddenly wished to get out into the country .
8 More than anything Mungo suddenly wanted to get out of the forest ; to be in his room , or talking to one of the family , or anywhere .
9 Garry would dearly love the club captaincy back but he is realistic enough to know he just has to get on with the game .
10 You 're not now , oh right okay that 's fine , the er , what I want you to do instead of writing , I mean two hundred words is , is probably feel nothing , but in fact because we want er it to be absolutely right , what I 'd like you to do this time is just write an appraisal , the contents thing er that we had last time we had if you like , content and appraisal and audience , but audience was only er , a sentence or two , I 'd simply like a , an appraisal , what your view of this is , if you 're writing that part of the review , so we 're only thinking in terms of a hundred words now , er what I 'd like you to do is to distribute yourselves over the laboratory , erm go wherever you want but do n't start talking with people , it 's not the , not the Cribben thing I just want to get on with the exercise that I 'm concerned with and write your appraisal , but obviously put your name on it and er if we meet back here thirty five minutes is that long enough for under a hundred words of excellent quality ?
11 But the Gypsies say they just want to get on with the local people .
12 But the Gypsies say they just want to get on with the local people .
13 Those who fail the Cl test flee in terror out onto the battlements — they just want to get out of the tower .
14 ‘ I just want to get out of the rain . ’
15 ‘ I just want to get out of the area and reach a phone . ’
16 Just a quick post-script to my last message about tickets for the Sheff Wed game — I just managed to get through to the ticket office , and they said that all postal applications were sent back yesterday with a letter telling you that it 's been postponed , and to re-apply if you still want tickets .
17 Speedie was just trying to get on with the game .
18 This is not Norma 's fault , she 's probably quite a nice dear who never wanted the fame , never wanted a prime minister for a husband , just wanted to get on with the washing up back in Huntingdon .
19 ‘ What would happen if anyone just wanted to get out of the partnership — I mean , without a death being involved ? ’
20 ‘ It 's easy now to say he was hasty , yet at the time he just wanted to get out of the place because he was so ill .
21 Terry did n't want any truck with service medicos , he just wanted to get back to the States and see Madeleine , Sulome and Gabrielle .
22 Brutality , as Hill describes and felt it , was a bitter part of his prison life ; you just learnt to get down on the floor as fast as you could and cover up as best you could .
23 Jonesy was still struggling to get out of the grave , and this he managed only with his father 's help , after falling back in once .
24 STUART RIPLEY could hardly wait to get back on the Ayresome Park pitch but , once there , was glad to get off again , writes David Alexander .
25 The occasional dinner party was a social duty ; they could hardly wait to get back to the seclusion of their own small house .
26 ‘ You know that the twins always seem to get up at the crack of dawn .
27 The final recipient has still got to get on with the work based on this small amount of information , only now with DOPACS he has a time limit .
28 it gives you more time to get on with the job of managing your business .
29 Sticks can be stabbed at you but chains can not ; they must be swung , and the heavier they are , the slower the swing — giving you more time to get out of the way .
30 Low house prices here mean that even though Northern Ireland is bottom of the UK salary league with an annual average of £15,012 , people can still afford to get on to the housing ladder .
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