Example sentences of "[adj] to get [adv prt] [prep] the " in BNC.
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1 | But I fancy that England is content to get on with the war , and that things take a more practical turn at home . |
2 | 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 . |
3 | By all accounts , William senior was not easy to get on with the turnover of partners in the early years of the practice was rapid , until he met his match in one Major Faulks in 1905 who not only outlived him , but stayed with the firm as a consultant until 1965 when he finally retired — at the age of 90 . |
4 | Léonie was delighted to get out of the house . |
5 | Mike had managed to smuggle her out of the hotel yesterday evening , but , as he had pointed out to her , it would be impossible to get out of the country at the moment without alerting the Press . |
6 | ‘ He would have had to have been very fast to get out to the car park in that time , ’ he said . |
7 | The men who lived at the graphite pits in 1898 — 9 were the same persons who would be likely to get up in the middle of the night to help take stolen cattle five kilometres to the next relay team , thereby earning a little money and easing the tedium of village life . |
8 | When the hot tub craze swept through California in the late 1970s middle-aged Wesley Laroya and his wife Helen were quick to get in on the action . |
9 | Over the years Aurigny has honed this to a fine art , and new pilots have to work hard to get up to the requisite standard . |
10 | ‘ Well , I certainly find that if I sit down and play blues for forty-five minutes or an hour , it 's hard to get back into the rock feel . |
11 | Her father had been glad to get out to the woods where he led a gang , made a living and found , in his daughter Kitty , all he wanted for softer pleasures . |
12 | He backed out of Nisodemus 's presence and was glad to get out into the bitingly cold air . |
13 | I did n't really stop to look earlier — I was just so glad to get out of the weather . ’ |
14 | Many people are glad to get out of the towns with all the problems of vandalism . |
15 | Really I reckon there 's something wrong , convinced of it , oh it runs alright once it 's moving it 's just such an awkward driver that 's all I was glad to get out of the thing I was did knock the bloody er whatsit down , buses knock the er |
16 | And then I expect you 'll be glad to get back to the Vicarage . |
17 | His slides were good and his descriptions fairly accurate , but I sensed we were all glad to get back to the comfort of the hotel and I to my electric fire . |
18 | The damp close air was heavy about them , it slowed their pace and they were glad to get back to the steading and watch Sullivan repairing the tractor . |
19 | So did I , thought Juliet , and for once she was glad to get back to the ward . |
20 | I know I shall be glad to get back across the Atlas . |
21 | It 's good to get out of the atmosphere of a Home for a time . ’ |
22 | And it does me good to get out of the house . |
23 | When referrals have come from other professionals it is important to get back to the parents ' view rather than working from the information in the referral letter . |
24 | If there is any restriction on movement , however slight , of the spine , hips and lower limbs , the person may be unable to get out of the way of a dangerous moving object with sufficient speed to prevent mishap . |
25 | If they do n't , one should dismiss the idea of cars unable to get out of the garage as sensational rubbish-mongering . |
26 | Add the position of his feet being wide apart and he is unable to get out of the way or play down the line . |
27 | My eye fell on a page she had left on the kitchen table the other day and I had noted , before I could avert my eyes , a pretty scholarly history of my conversion to double-knotting , after an incident when I was unable to get out of the train at Greenwich one evening and found myself being carried on to Maze Hill , because someone was standing on the trailing lace of my shoe . |
28 | Several of the larger equipment companies have a mail order service , which is useful if you are unable to get out to the shops . |
29 | When a dolphin becomes trapped in a net , it drowns because it is unable to get back to the surface to refill its lungs when the supply of air runs out . |
30 | After the lecture there were tea and refreshments and it was not until fairly late that I rang Emily just to say Hello , and how sorry I was to be too busy to get over to the house to see her this trip . |