Example sentences of "get [pron] [adv prt] of the [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ I get them out of the public library . ’ |
2 | For an English director it might be very difficult to imagine getting it out of the traditional setting . ’ |
3 | Four weeks of being cooped up with Flute had taught Arthur that Ubu Roi was the most seminal possible thing about funniness , and if it was a book he was prepared to try getting it out of the public library one day . |
4 | Show some determination today and start getting yourself out of the biggest rut you 're in . |
5 | In the Berchtesgaden district , most recorded comment — as elsewhere — was loyal in tone , but there were difficulties in getting anything out of the rural population . |
6 | CONNOISSEURS of the bizarre will recall the night Sheffield Wednesday players spent on wintry moorland , one of their ex-commando trainer 's ploys to get them out of the Third Division . |
7 | My aunt was the one who went to all the trouble of trying to get me out of the Soviet Union . ’ |
8 | So we continue travelling hopefully , traversing the geography , and absorbing impressions that may get me out of the pictorial routine that all artists are prone to . |
9 | We worked very hard to get him out of the Soviet Union — well , you know all that , Mr Carpenter will have told you , and he will have told you what went wrong … ’ |
10 | In an interview with The Scotsman in July last year , only weeks after he was diagnosed as having an inoperable bronchial tumour , Mr McTear , who smoked between 40 and 60 cigarettes a day for 30 years , said he did not expect to get anything out of the legal action . |
11 | I would n't call last season debacle making the right decisions , my own personal opinion of him is that he was the right manager to get us out of the second divsion , but I feel that given the players and money avail able to him he maybe could have done better . |