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

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1 ‘ David did very , very well to get through the Turkey game the way he did and if you were not aware that he had this problem with his knee , you would n't have known it was there .
2 She would have to be an H-M exec to get through the DeLorean 's brain , and unseal the system .
3 It had taken Duroc at least three quarters of an hour to get through the Holderness-Manolo security system .
4 But ministers were remaining tight-lipped about the reports , which , if true , would probably not satisfy Tory rebels and the package would be unlikely to get through the Commons .
5 Any adventurer who fails a WP test will be unable to get past the Ward , but the test may be repeated for each two rounds spent trying to force a way through .
6 It now seems easier for Scots to get into a Great Britain senior team than it is to get into the Commonwealth Games team .
7 MALCOLM ALLEN , who has not been able to get into the Norwich first team this season , showed that Wales ' absentee forwards , Ian Rush and Mark Hughes , had better beware of him .
8 There was a shod scuffle with police , who thought the demonstrators were trying to get into the Guildhall , but Cooper successfully diffused the situation .
9 Independent producers , whose dogged campaign to get into the BBC and ITV as well as Channel 4 has bitten deep into the old structures of the companies , now form an established and vibrant third force in television .
10 ‘ I 'd like to get into the BBC
11 Trinity Square still proving to be very busy so expect a few minutes wait if you want to get yourself parked in there and have a couple of minutes wait if you want to get into the Victoria Centre that 's at the York Street entrance .
12 She studied the Workshops , frowning , and Caspar , who was becoming alarmed by this time , saw that this was no ruse to secure his assistance ; Fenella intended to get into the Robemaker 's Workshops and rescue whoever it was who was in there .
13 He was glad to see him , for he knew him for a tough , sturdy fellow , who was considered certain to get into the Owsla as soon as he reached full weight .
14 I went after him ; he was trying to get into the Land Rover .
15 It is not always easy to get into the New Zealand landscape .
16 We would not like to get into the New Zealand situation of ranching , but it seems in many senses we are already there .
17 Nobody in the SDLP criticised Currie for his espousal of Thatcherism or for the fact that he stood against and defeated a Labour candidate to get into the Dail .
18 It took the Croatian archaeologists almost a year to obtain permission to get into the Barbariga military base .
19 ‘ It was terribly embarrassing , ’ said Tom , who is to attempt a memory record for Britain to get into the Guinness Book of Records .
20 He added : ‘ I 'd really love to get into the Guinness Book of Records .
21 erm if you want to get into the Bluecoat .
22 OFFICIALLY there has been just one Clinton fighting on the Democrat ticket to get into the White House .
23 I 've just told it how to get into the TARDIS .
24 MANY families and groups are paying more than they need to get into the Surrey County Agricultural Show — the UK 's largest one day — on Bank Holiday Monday , May 25th .
25 But there are just so many different styles of music involved ; you do n't know what you 're going to get with a Texas musician .
26 The contras had been supported , through the CIA , since 1981 ; in 1984 , in order to get round the Boland amendments ( which forbade the administration to spend appropriated money on the contras ) management of the war was brought into an office on the third floor of a building beside the White House .
27 A reply was then received from Mr Quarry but the proposed ground rent of £15 a year was considered too high and another effort was made to get from the Baroness von Steiglitz some ground at the corner of what is now Carrickblacker Avenue and in the same field where the existing Tabernacle stood .
28 It took only ten minutes to get from the Hatton 's flat to Bailey Street where , at number ten , Jack Pertwee lived with his widowed father .
29 The sawdust we used to get from the Peasenhall works , Smyth 's the Suffolk drill-makers . ’
30 The aim is to get in the Guinness Book of Records by beating the current record of 2,463 objects in the air simultaneously from 821 jugglers juggling at least three objects .
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