Example sentences of "[verb] get back on the " in BNC.

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1 When she dislocated a shoulder while chasing a burglar , and was out of action for another four months , she could n't wait to get back on the beat again .
2 STUART RIPLEY could hardly wait to get back on the Ayresome Park pitch but , once there , was glad to get off again , writes David Alexander .
3 That would be the end of any engagements elsewhere , just when he was beginning to get back on the international circuit .
4 The Exiles are bristling to get back on the scene and currently lie third in the Division Four South , tucked in behind Havant and Basingstoke .
5 After losing 83–6 to Blaydon and 42–3 to Horden in recent weeks , the injuries are not helping to get back on the rails in time for their final two league matches this month against Sunderland and Mowden Park .
6 ‘ It is important for everyone to roll up their sleeves and fight to get back on the winning trail . ’
7 Forced to convene yet another extraordinary meeting by sacked directors trying to get back on the board , Amalgamated Financial Investments has sent out a suitably apologetic letter to shareholders .
8 We got lost in Nuneaton trying to get back on the M6 , and were now heading through Lancashire at dusk , still an hour or more from the border .
9 The PGL had a run of four successive titles broken by the NIBA last year and our hoping to get back on the rails in Dublin next month .
10 I have got back on the adrenalin and enthusiasm for these first few matches and hopefully in the next six weeks you will see the best of me . ’
11 Neil Graham has always held a high position of Gold Blade , who will be backed to get back on the winning trail in the Conquest Cup .
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