Example sentences of "[num] get the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 In 1918 , women over 30 got the vote in Britain .
2 2 Get the students to do so correctly .
3 PATCHWORK Marshall JMP-1 Get the cheque book out , dust off the credit card or prepare to attack that porcelain pig with a mallet !
4 Count your pulse for 6 seconds and multiply the answer by 10 to get the rate per minute .
5 A preliminary meeting in Manchester in October 1853 got the support of the BFASS committee ; when an inaugural gathering was held Sturge and Thompson spoke from the same platform and it was resolved that the Manchester Anti-Slavery Union should become an auxiliary of the BFASS .
6 All three get the chance to put their case against Ipswich tonight .
7 Now it says B what did you do with th the numbers one hundred and fifty and three to get the answer ?
8 So , divide the number of degrees of turn by three to get the time .
9 ‘ Tell George I got the Canadian and it will stop in Cartier .
10 Divide this number of degrees by 3 to get the number of seconds of turn .
11 The next five get the GameGear on its own .
12 1 Get the students to utter the same structure repeatedly ( overlearning ) .
13 Thus in ( 162 ) one gets the impression of a person laughing against his own will , because of some external coercion .
14 but what you need is a one to one to get the child out the building if there 's a fire
15 Well they said that it is going to cost about seventy five to get the kitchen done .
16 With a network of around 120,000 miles of footpaths , bridleways and by-ways to tackle — it 'll take clearance groups at least until the year 2000 to get the job done .
17 First five out of the hat on June 15 get the prize .
18 ‘ You two get the hell outa here ! ’ he yelled at them .
19 Since she felt as though someone had physically kicked her in the stomach , it took Shannon a moment or two to get the words out .
20 Often he lost count or forgot to multiply his fifteen seconds ' worth by four to get the rate per minute .
21 The H3 building had been put up hastily in the early 1950s to get the scientists out of their first accommodation that had been little more than Nissen huts .
22 The chairman was Jack Bennett , a former member of the CPNI ; he came from a Protestant background and had led a campaign in the late 1950s to get the CPNI to return to the pro-republican line of the Irish Communists in the 1930s .
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