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

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1 ‘ Obviously the message has not got through to some parts of the organisation . ’
2 Is it not time , though , to ask whether all this heady ferment over a mere conductor — Abbado or any other — has not got out of hand ?
3 Some perfect and well scarred nut slots protect a tricky move into the final groove , which is bridged pleasantly to the top , always assuming your rope drag has not got out of control .
4 Palo Alto , California-based Neuron Data Inc has finally got around to releasing version 2.0 of its Open Interface in the UK ( UX No 386 ) .
5 I 've kept him informed and he has just to get on with his job .
6 Pierre Berton , who wrote the books , has just got back from Vancouver .
7 He travels with camels and has just got back .
8 This ex Go Go has more get up and go than most of us put together , she 's strikingly beautiful and very , very talented .
9 Yet somehow the message has still to get through to British Rail that the communication of travel information is no longer a luxury , to be fed in titbits to grateful passengers .
10 The message of recent opinion polls has clearly got through .
11 Gary has n't got round to watching it
12 Erm so whether she has n't got round to it I do n't know .
13 It 's like , one day developing right and she has n't got round to collecting them yet .
14 But elsewhere in Swindon the message has n't got through .
15 Over the last seven months , Lawrence has quietly got on with a rebuilding job at Ayresome Park .
16 Since she has done the unthinkable in LA and has never got round to buying herself a car , bus rides are the only way of getting around and the 6am commute to work brings her daily inspiration .
17 Maggie reckons her family should be help up as a warning to everyone who has never got round to it .
18 For example : ‘ I 'd better get up bright and early today .
19 We 've got to change , darling , so you 'd better get up . ’
20 Er I was still slobbing around in my dressing-gown and you know yesterday 's clothes and so I I I thought I 'd better get up and do stuff .
21 ‘ You 'd better get up .
22 ‘ Now I 'd better get up .
23 ‘ I 'd better get round and feed Eliot , ’ said Constance .
24 I 'd better get on with my telephoning .
25 Now we 'd better get on if Mr Lawler is to get those grouse in time . ’
26 ‘ Here , we 'd better get on .
27 Erm we 'd better get on to a few other things .
28 " Well , you 'd better get on , then , " he said , " and anyone else who wants to Personally , I 'm , going to wait until Fiver and Pipkin are fit to tackle it .
29 We 'd better get on . "
30 ‘ I 'd better get on , I suppose , ’ said Mrs Flaherty .
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