Example sentences of "[adj] to get out " in BNC.

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1 Grendon is unlike all other prisons in Britain , not least because it 's easier to get out than to get in .
2 Erm I do n't know the figures , but the feeling certainly was that everybody wanted to get out , and thy wanted to get out as quickly as they could .
3 And God 's blessings came to Ruth only as she was willing to get out and do something .
4 But she sat , afraid to get out and face some possible disappointment .
5 Whatever their riders might desire , those English mounts broke , reared , panicked , cannoned into one another to get out of the way , and doing so caused utter confusion and collapse amongst the enemy .
6 Nomes had to scramble over one another to get out of the way when one of the floorboards in the manager 's office was pulled up .
7 He was two last Christmas , he 's lovely an'all , but you see it does n't take much to get out of a routine .
8 Since the cells are closed , spindle-shaped tubes , the liquid water inside them is not very easy to get out .
9 It may not seem as hard nowadays , because people know that it 's easy to get out of .
10 Before the company begins to move on its new goodies , it has Open Interface version 2.1 to get out of the door .
11 Léonie was delighted to get out of the house .
12 Some contracts may be impossible to get out of , or may have expensive cancellation clauses .
13 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 .
14 Pizza stains are almost impossible to get out , Sam knows that .
15 They then discovered the shaft 's brittle shale walls made it almost impossible to get out again .
16 I 'm gon na have there are some crumbs in those packets but they 're impossible to get out .
17 He peered at the menu displayed with accompanying admiring press comment outside the Trattoria San Giorgio , and decided you 'd be lucky to get out of there under £20 a head .
18 Paralysed from the waist down , he was lucky to get out alive .
19 The tension rose , and in the fighting that followed he was very lucky to get out alive .
20 There were no set hours , no union to look after their interests and they were lucky to get out on a Saturday or Sunday to go to the chapel , or on certain special occasions to the cinema .
21 We were lucky to get out of Stalingrad .
22 I was engaged to be married once , an engagement that was a mistake and I was lucky to get out of without too much trouble and then I met you and that is the sum total of my ‘ sexual demands ’ as you put it .
23 Station officer Dave Hodgson said : ‘ The family was very lucky to get out .
24 He was lucky to get out . ’
25 A common cause of incontinence at night is a mild sedative , which makes the person too sleepy to get out of bed .
26 ‘ He would have had to have been very fast to get out to the car park in that time , ’ he said .
27 They declared that they would never again go willingly to war without clear political aims ; that when they did go to war for such aims , they would do so with overwhelming force ; and that they would discover , in advance , how they were supposed to get out of a job once they had started it .
28 We are supposed to get out and obtain , somehow , transport to another village 50 river km away where the Tisza becomes Hungarian again .
29 well that , what , he works late , how am I supposed to get out there then ?
30 His opportunity comes when a lone housewife is murdered by a psychopath and shortly after he himself catches " flue and reckons he can trick the doctor into giving him an alibi that he is too ill to get out of bed .
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