Example sentences of "get we [adv prt] " in BNC.

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1 Once the instructor had got us up , by lift , to where the air is rarefied , he disappeared .
2 ‘ George , he 's got us over a barrel .
3 They 've got us down that we won !
4 With such a wide definition , it might be more useful to consider what this leaves out , rather than what it includes — which gets us back to the categories I am working with here : it excludes inheritance and invention .
5 And this gets us back to looking at process .
6 It gets us off to a wonderful start . ’
7 And I get us up in the morning now and , she said she said the temperature rises to sometimes a hundred and twenty in the summer !
8 And that get us up to a certain distance , but even then that method must fail when you get beyond a certain distance .
9 I really hope they can raise their game and get us back into the Premier Division .
10 To calm us down , get us out of the house .
11 We 'd get our demands because anything was done to shut us up and get us out of their offices .
12 There 's the notorious low-rise Noble Court stranded beside a highway overlooking the Tyne with " Get us out of this hell " written on the wall .
13 Get us out of this alleyway , ’ Rex shouted .
14 There 's the notorious lowrise Noble Court stranded beside a highway overlooking the Tyne with " Get us out of this hell " written on the wall .
15 and he 's still got something to do with the union , so what he did , when he goes to these meetings he said to the , ah you bloke at Nissan how about getting us round
16 There was also a Corporal of the week — Vigno — and his duties included the more mundane tasks of getting us up in the mornings and making sure that the rooms were kept clean .
17 ‘ Then I 'll work out a route for getting us back behind our own lines . ’
18 And , er after the break , it 'll be Anne from Hither Green , getting us off on our section of phone calls .
19 ‘ That will take us four hours , getting us in at midnight .
20 Abrams , having mumbled about ‘ the gratitude of the secretary ( of state ) and of the President for getting us out of this jam ’ , was asked by Ibnu again : ‘ But what concrete do we get out of this ? ’
21 So I said , Screw this — I 'm getting us out of here .
22 A change in our fortunes at Kenilworth Road will soon get us up the table . ’
23 ‘ We were about twenty minutes altogether from the point where we realized they could n't get us down to the time when we stepped on to the roof .
24 Tom said if I brought some mates , he 'd get us in .
25 Well , you said if I brought a couple of mates down you 'd get us in .
26 ‘ Could you get us in ? ’
27 ‘ Oh , I can get us in , all right . ’
28 Can you get us in ? ’
29 ‘ There 's only one ride that will get us back to the east of the Swamp and that 's the one we 've come by .
30 A discussion in our house on ( let's say ) the necessity of buying a new fridge will move swiftly to the education system ( via the rival claim of school fees to the purchase of the fridge ) and whether a move to another area might obviate the need for paying them , taking in a quick discourse on the immorality of contributing to the divisive education system in this country anyway ; this will lead to the if-we-sold-our-suburban-villa-we-could-buy-a-Georgian-manor-house-in-the-country conversation ; which will in its turn move on quite quickly to the horrors of British Rail and the greatly increased subjection to them that such a move would entail ; then we get to leaving all our friends behind , and to debating whether having them to stay at the weekends would not be perfectly satisfactory ; which will remind us that two or more of them are coming to dinner that very night and we 'd better get down to the off-licence ; then it 's shall-we-get-Muscadet-or-the-Chardonnay- again and for-heaven's-sake-get-enough which will get us back to the fridge , on account of last time we got the Chardonnay , I did n't put it in it soon enough .
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