Example sentences of "and get [adv prt] [prep] [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | Erm , what , the nice shot is to get back up to , there and get over to the yellow . |
2 | I had learnt how to take orders and get up in the morning since I had gone to boarding school at age seven . |
3 | ‘ Will you go down to the town , to the nearest phone box and get on to the station ? |
4 | Gooch 's men must accept their lot and get on with a job for which they are being paid around £20,000 a man . |
5 | The thing is to take these issues on board and get on with the work as a community of artists . |
6 | ‘ They 're not prima donnas and [ they ] simply roll up their sleeves and get on with the work , ’ says one admiring Du Pont veteran . |
7 | Some of the courses I know , lecturers go drinking with the students and everything , but they 're all older , suits and ties and things , there 's nothing wrong with that , you just know them to be a lecturer and get on with the work rather than thinking , ‘ we had a nice drink last night , did n't we ? ’ |
8 | Finally , the back bones , who tackle the problems and get on with the work of solving them . |
9 | I 'll turn this off now and get on with the dinner . |
10 | ‘ Oh shut up and get on with the game . ’ |
11 | It 's best with anything like that to dismiss it and get on with the game , ’ said Richardson , whose team were playing their opening tour match against an Australian Cricket Board XI in Perth today . |
12 | In principle , they can fix their financial risks and get on with the job of dealing with the commercial ones . |
13 | ‘ So less of your havers , Bernard , and get on with the job . |
14 | Of these CorelDRAW is a good bet if your drawing needs are ( or may become ) fairly sophisticated ; Graphics Works is ideal for first time users , because they can pick it up and get on with the job from scratch with the minimum of fuss ; and if you want good page layout software to support your images , The Publisher 's Treasure Chest is a good choice . |
15 | ‘ Can we cut the expert critical review and get on with the job of finding out where Jenny is ! ’ |
16 | Well can , can the clerk er ask about getting three tenders , and take the lowest and get on with the job ? |
17 | Then he could leave early , and get on with the Business . |
18 | The only way to handle excuses is to treat them for what they are and get on with the business of collecting your money . |
19 | ‘ Let us be done with the arguments of participant observation versus interviewing — as we have largely dispensed with the arguments for psychology versus sociology — and get on with the business of attacking our problems with the widest array of conceptual and methodological tools that we possess and they demand ’ . |
20 | ‘ I suggest that we try to put our differences aside for the next few hours and get on with the business at hand . ’ |
21 | Reacting to the killings , the Nobel Peace Prize winner , Desmond Tutu , the Anglican archbishop of Cape Town , said it demonstrated it was time for all South Africa 's politicians ‘ for goodness sake to get off your butts and get on with the business of getting a new constitution for this country . |
22 | We have to forget about our prejudices , and get on with the task in hand … let's do it ! |
23 | Governor Wilson ordered withdrawal of the last National Guard units on May 18 , declaring that it was " time to bring the troops home and get on with the task of rebuilding Los Angeles " . |
24 | Despite the older officers ' complaints , the level of job satisfaction — when they can set aside the paperwork and get out into the field — is high ( cf. |
25 | ‘ They smuggled drugs and used criminal ways to buy their dreams and get out of the system . |
26 | If kids were playing football in the street , they had to accept your authority and get out of the way . |
27 | ‘ Just tell them to open the doors and get out of the way . ’ |
28 | They were required to leave their beds and get out of the hostel by nine o'clock in the morning , and they were not expected to hang about any more until about five or more in the evening . |
29 | The verderers were travelling quickly , for they were anxious to recapture the horses and get out of the forest as soon as possible . |
30 | Then she convinced him he was to say no more about leaving and get back to the story he had been working on when the row blew up . |