Example sentences of "[pron] [modal v] get [adv prt] [prep] [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 I must get on with Sheikh 's essay , ’ said Robert — ‘ it 's twenty pages long ! ’
2 Well , I must get back to work .
3 I must get back to work .
4 I 'll get down to business then , shall I ? — I want you to do something for me . ’
5 ‘ As soon as my leg is better I 'll get back to things as before ’
6 I 'll get back to bed , ’ she muttered .
7 I 'll get back from work and one of our boys is just getting up , or another day they 'll all be just sat there , and you 'll find all the bread 's gone .
8 I loved it too , because I could get on with things while he was bouncing .
9 I could get back to base via that loft … but the thought of it made my scalp wriggle .
10 It was a couple of hours before I could get back to Eleanor Darcy .
11 , a delightful person , was my guardian angel for the first ten days of the tour , and was also good enough to rearrange my return journey from Hyderabad , so that I could get back in London in time for an appointment on 29 November .
12 And so I said , Yes , I would do that for the year and then I 'd get back into teaching .
13 I would get back from work absolutely exhausted .
14 But I shall get back to Sam .
15 I can get on with Dorothy Wordsworth .
16 Now I am myself again I can get on with Lover at the Gate .
17 Erm so we we need to work out how much space we need to stand it in so that I can get back to Philip and and and agree that .
18 Perhaps I can get back to England one day . ’
19 ‘ I said I can get back on board by myself . ’
20 but I can get in to Fram and if I need to go to the doctors I can get to the doctors which unfortunately is , is necessary our children .
21 Man too has a mechanism of mimicry which goes back to the baby in the cradle answering its mother 's smile , older than any utilization for learning how others feel or how to pick up skills or even for play , and which can get out of control in neurotic echolalia and echopraxia .
22 In reality , the basis for the prevailing sense of optimism was nothing more than a sense that , with hostilities now ended , everyone could get back to business as usual .
23 ‘ I realise something is wrong , and I do n't have to look too far to know the cause , ’ she added darkly , ‘ but you must get down to work or the show will be a failure , and you do n't want that to happen , do you ? ’
24 With this Demon you 'll lose loadsa Fuzzies , so you must get out of sync as soon as possible ( it 's tough , so keep trying ) .
25 You must get out of bed , ’ she said , ‘ and sit in this chair-then I can remake your bed . ’
26 And they er er they said people getting on this train er it was on the eleven , platform eleven near to where we were make sure , they kept giving it out giving it out , you must get out at Leamington Spa if you want Banbury .
27 And then she must get down to flat-hunting .
28 ‘ While you 're waiting , ’ said Wexford , ‘ you might get on to Stamford police , Stamford in Lincolnshire .
29 The sergeant — his pace blackened with boot polish — assured me , ‘ You 'll get through at Clones . ’
30 You 'll get on with Humber , once she gets used to you . ’
  Next page