Example sentences of "get [adv prt] with the [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Please can we get on with the serious stuff please .
2 No further discussion necessary on their budget let's get on with the serious business of funding real education in Hertfordshire which we asked and in this particular case the Labour party .
3 Let us get on with the Irish debate .
4 In spite of the obvious gains in recent years — and no one could be more grateful than I to Robert Runcie and all he achieved — we now need a period of calmness , of peace , to grow and get on with the real work of caring for others and serving Christ in and through others .
5 Then stratigraphical nomenclature can be forgotten and we can get on with the real work of stratigraphy , which is correlation and interpretation .
6 And erm , anyway , I 'm , I 'm sorry to have to tell you that but erm now we 'll get on with the second half of the meeting .
7 Always at the back of the mind are worries over how well one will get on with the other artists .
8 ‘ How does he get on with the other fellows ? ’
9 Then put the coin in the slot , please Rex , and we 'll get on with the new plan . ’
10 ‘ There may be benefits for us too — if we do n't get on with the new rector he may only be here for five years , ’ said Miss Duff .
11 He could not get on with the believing Jews from Eastern Europe whose religion and traditions he neither shared nor understood .
12 How did you get on with the DOUBLE CHIN ELIMINATOR ?
13 You have to just get on with the next board .
14 How did he get on with the pre-war Vienna Philharmonic ?
15 And never in my wildest dream did we imagine that Labour would get in with the resounding majority that they did get in .
16 Former champion and born-again Christian George Foreman — who has seen the sleazy side of life at first hand — warned after Lewis 's brilliant two-round knockout of Razor Ruddock at Earls Court : ‘ Lennox Lewis will win the world title — as long as he does n't get in with the wrong crowd . ’
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