Example sentences of "get [pers pn] out [prep] the [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 And a job would get me out of the attic .
2 A job would get me out of the house a lot and provide me with much needed money .
3 I had an idea I could hide out there for a while , maybe rest up , maybe make a connection who could get me out of the City .
4 ‘ If the boy 's good , we 'll be delighted to see him here , but he must get me out of the side . ’
5 Cos they , they er Walter used to say , any positive voters we must get them out on the day .
6 You 'll you 'll never get her out of the water .
7 ‘ I 'll get her out in the middle of the workshop , then you can have a good look around her . ’
8 REVERSE : Weather stunning , food great , Chris has found some snorkelling gear and now I ca n't get him out of the water !
9 I think he was rather taken aback because my understanding is that he told David that he could get him out of the contract .
10 Well , of course , DeFries did n't get him out of the contract .
11 My Lord the started sum of money originally , sixty thousand pounds was the total loan and there were further overdraught facilities and and it 's the plaintiff 's case that without it it was simply not going to be manageable and as a result of that having thought carefully about erm , position it is his case that he rang Peter , told him that there were major problems in the financing of the deal and asked him if he could get him out of the contract because the finance he anticipated was no longer going to be available and it was his case that Peter advised him that there was no way out because contracts had been exchanged , er Mr was told very clearly that he was committed legally now to the deal and that he 'd better try and rearrange some finances since clearly they were moving towards er the completion date .
12 ‘ How do I get him out of the country ?
13 He could not think of a single convincing excuse that would get him out of the house .
14 She must get him out of the house .
15 its , it 's , it 's the same Saturdays and Sundays , I ca n't get him out of the house and yet soon as we get there we have friends and family and they say , keep saying come on , come up and see us , I went up in the mini on me own one day and spent a couple of days with her , but , it , it ai n't the same when you go on your own , I dare n't go too far in my mini because it 's , it 's erm , it 's not a car that you can be hundred per cent sure of it , I mean as soon as it rains it stops anyway , we went out in it today and there 's all water in the front of the , in the front , but
16 I used to try and get him out into the country in the car .
17 I could n't get mine out of the packet
18 Is that washing finished and I 'll get it out of the dryer .
19 It would certainly get it out of the back of my Reliant .
20 ‘ All we want to do is get it out of the lorry .
21 ‘ Oh , ’ she replied , ‘ I must get it out of the library ! ’
22 His statement implies that we are not yet out of the recession , so let us borrow some more , increase the PSBR , and do the Keynesian thing which , a few years ago , we did not think we should do , and perhaps that will get us out of the recession by the time of the election .
23 But this wo n't get us out on the tide . ’
24 Does my right hon. Friend agree , however , that for 20 years he and his predecessors have pursued the will-of-the-wisp of power-sharing , devolved government ; and that , for as long as it is pursued , the IRA will believe , rightly or wrongly , that it will get us out in the end ?
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