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

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1 Because for some people it 's as easy to get into Newcastle as it is into .
2 ‘ Of course , if you get married now , ’ Aunt Lilian said , ‘ you may not find it so easy to get into politics . ’
3 Living in this area , for example , you can visit a campus university here at Sussex , a town-type institution at Brighton Polytechnic or Portsmouth Polytechnic , a city-based university in Southampton , and it 's very easy to get to London .
4 It 's quite easy to get to £50 a week just for basic essentials like stable and grazing rental , bedding and feed .
5 It 's all pretty standard stuff for the digitally-minded , and easy to get to grips with for the novice .
6 This rebated , dry glazed pivot offers improved weather resistance , single handed operation ( so they 're easy to get to grips with ) , and guarantees improved thermal efficiency in commercial , industrial and residential buildings .
7 Microsoft 's attempts to increase usability have worked well , producing a package which is easy to get to grips with and fun to use .
8 Although its drawing and selection tools are slightly more convoluted than they need be , the program is easy to get to grips with and has some nice touches that make it more usable than most .
9 bit more easy to get to grips with the physical stuff
10 I 'm going to , as will become evident , mainly focus on the diary , because that 's where at least eighty percent of the data resides , and it 's the bit that 's most easy to get to grips with .
11 Nonsense , said I ; it was still perfectly easy to get around London .
12 ‘ I just find it impossible to get into character here . ’
13 On the opening day it was almost impossible to get into Salle 41 owing to the crowds .
14 Thereafter , someone had decided to make it well-nigh impossible to get to Ulm from Messkirch and had constructed an obstacle course of road-works , diversions , traffic jams and misplaced signposts which did my temper no good at all in the sweltering heat .
15 Very few people find it impossible to get to Flowers East .
16 I found it impossible to get from Mr and Mrs what their care would be , they were either unable or unwilling to discuss it with me , unquote .
17 We were dead lucky to get to bed without a belting on a Sunday . ’
18 Families with children are much more likely to get into debt than people without children , and there is a greater risk to larger families .
19 Active , occupied children are less likely to get into trouble .
20 Second , takeover raids typically bid up the share price significantly , so again the incumbent management has considerable leeway before it is likely to get into trouble and be out of a job .
21 Yet he realized it was the best he was likely to get from Nora and that , on balance , he would do well to think of it as ‘ Nora 's apology , ’ accept it as such , and hope that these aberrations in her behaviour would die away .
22 ‘ We are always looking for more employers to become involved and anyone who wants to support our work is welcome to get in touch . ’
23 ‘ It 's hard to get past Greg Norman , ’ he said .
24 It means I do n't have to work too hard to get into university but I will try anyway for myself , ’ she said .
25 Over the past few months they have been told that their primary and community health care is awful ; now the government tells them that accident and emergency departments will shut , along with 2000-odd hospital beds , when their immediate evidence is that it is hard to get into hospital .
26 ‘ Young people are finding it very hard to get into magic today .
27 I find it hard to get into relationships .
28 WHEN she is n't flying back and forth from England to Australia , Sarah Key helps the rich and famous to get into shape .
29 So , why has the PC taken so long to get to grips with the market and how is it faring today , some two years after the phrase ‘ desktop publishing ’ was coined .
30 Sufferers are never too young nor too old , too early in the disease nor too late to get into recovery when they truly want it : the " Big Books " of other Fellowships record many stories of recovery in sufferers who had been given up as hopeless .
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