Example sentences of "[art] [noun] to get on " in BNC.

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1 ‘ Instead , we should keep out of things and allow the experts to get on with running The Arts Centre .
2 It is very rarely sufficient just to put the product on the table and expect the photographer to get on with photographing it .
3 Boys should go to school because they need the skills to get on in the world , because they will spend their lives moving between household and family and the institutions of state and nation .
4 It appointed Patrick Le Quement , one of the world 's most free-thinking car designers , and gave him the freedom to get on with it .
5 The trust my partner and I share gives us the freedom to get on and do things without stopping every ten minutes to check up on each other .
6 The overlap with the districts needs to be eradicated , it 's a black hole at the moment , every district can pass a its surplus on to another district , and indeed it would be the last district to prepare a district wide local plan that has to meet the residue of the Greater York requirement , it may maybe a good stimulus for the districts to get on with their local plans , but that 's not an planning way .
7 Much of policy-implementation today requires positive action by government officials — it is no longer a case of making rules and leaving the citizen to get on with observing them , subject only to policing .
8 Doer — urging the team to get on with the task in hand .
9 The question is , whether the culture of Italy is one that throws up people who will be public spirited , who will make good trustees while allowing the curators to get on with their work .
10 He spoke of the need to learn shorthand , kept emphasising the need to get on with people .
11 The hard work is missing , the motivation is missing , the need to get on is missing and the exam results inevitably suffer from that .
12 She knows she could have gone much further but would not dream of stabbing anyone in the back to get on , even if they deserved it .
13 They were out at work often till late evening , but gave us the run of the house and William had the chance to get on with some schoolwork .
14 ‘ As far as Frank is concerned , he is entirely satisfied with what I am doing and he has given me the space to get on with it .
15 It 's almost as if some teachers hold the belief that the best parents are those that are docile and ignorant about the school , leaving the professionals to get on with the job .
16 I also think it is time politicians stopped trying to interfere in the everyday affairs of education , and left the professionals to get on with it .
17 If you use the art lesson to check school meal monies , or mark your books , and leave the children to get on , you will not be teaching this subject well ; and the children will suffer and so will their work .
18 She glared at him , told the children to get on with it — and would Nicco Haberdasheri like to share the joke with the rest of the class ?
19 It was the way to get on .
20 As immigrants in a British colony , the way to get on was through an English education .
21 Good relationships and the ability to get on with people , including your own colleagues as well as your clients , are of great importance .
22 Again , tact and the ability to get on with people are vital at all stages , particularly if the client has its own research department as some of the very big companies do .
23 Prospective employers are looking for suitably qualified people , normally graduates — not necessarily law graduates — who show the kind of skills needed to make a successful contribution as a solicitor to the work of a local authority : the ability to analyse a problem and to communicate effectively , flexibility , and the ability to get on well with other members of a team .
24 And you had to run along the plank to get on .
25 How long can you leave the rest of the class to get on with their own work ?
26 Strong muscles will also help the mother to get on with the day-to-day chores of postnatal care , such as carrying the baby and its accessories .
27 Mr Saville added : ‘ If they slap a CPO on the site , then it will be up to the councils to get on with the job of reclamation .
28 There are no steps to get on and off the ‘ Mildred Stocks ’ ; wheelchairs can be wheeled straight on board on a special ramp and people with sticks or walking aids will have no problems .
29 of when you 've got to be a rotter to get on but I 'm afraid that 's how it 's gon na be
30 It 's a bugger of a square to get on , that one .
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