Example sentences of "[verb] [adv prt] [adv] with " in BNC.

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1 And I got on swimmingly with them .
2 That was all right then , April thought , and got on again with her pastry rolling .
3 I says , Well alright that mi er very very nice chap to deal with and oh I I got on alright with him but he would n't have this .
4 You got on alright with him did n't you ?
5 Well I kept well I I got on alright with him cos he I were a lot younger and he used to give me sixpence to go and get some ice cream so as I them would be on their own a bit you see .
6 At dinner the undergraduate in his second year got on well with the ex-prime minister , which is a mark up to both sides .
7 It always pleased Marie when Simon said that she got on well with his dog : it made her feel special .
8 Mrs Thatcher , a 1950s chemist , got on well with Sir Walter Marshall , a 1950s physicist and the CEGB chairman .
9 In spite of that , he got on well with Tanning , whom he found a ‘ nice woman ’ , and with the man who shared her studio , always painting away while John was there .
10 Noreen was kept on after the try-out week , but she knew that was only on the strength of Fred , the Stage Manager 's sympathetic report , and for the fact that she got on well with everyone in the company , especially Bernie .
11 I got on well with Rosemary right from the start , soon realising that though I had lost one friend , I had found another .
12 Ryan , who gave Johanna a pair of satin pyjamas for Christmas , said they often went to the seaside at Great Yarmouth together and he got on well with her parents .
13 He was made a trusty and the other prisoners got on well with him .
14 Ex-US Army paramedic Matthew Brafman , 33 , had ‘ a reasonable bedside manner ’ and got on well with the patients at the geriatric hospital where he worked .
15 He liked what he saw of the school and got on well with the Chairman of the Governors , a fellow classicist .
16 I got on well with him and he was partly responsible a year or so later when I moved to a morning paper in Wales .
17 Born in Aberdeen , he got on well with Colquhoun and MacBryde , was physically the smallest of all Minton 's boyfriends , but also the most aggressive ; after his periods of leave Minton often had a black eye .
18 ‘ No , but Chris got on well with him .
19 ‘ I got on well with Chris while he was here doing his research .
20 He was also a man who got on well with almost all his associates , and his early death in 1854 was seen as a great blow to natural history .
21 David was the first of her children to wed and Laura got on well with her first in-law , welcoming her into the family as well as the company .
22 At fourteen , Tony got on well with his peer group and had settled quickly into the assessment centre routine .
23 ‘ But I got on well with him .
24 Both Rachel and Nina got on well with the men , who in turn liked and respected the nursing team , and usually there was an easy-going air of camaraderie in the centre .
25 He 'd lived there most of his life and got on well with his neighbours .
26 Her fellow students had noticed nothing , Pamela was active within the college and got on well with her friends .
27 COUNCILLOR John Adams , a Unionist member of Derry City Council , got on well with Mrs Jean Kennedy Smith , the US Ambassador to Ireland when she visited the maiden city .
28 ‘ I got on well with Frank and I was disappointed to see him go .
29 I much enjoyed my 15 years in England and got on well with nearly everyone .
30 And I enjoyed it , it was quite good , I got on well with the staff .
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