Example sentences of "[vb mod] get [adv prt] with [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | I really must get on with other things . ’ |
2 | ‘ A secretary will ring up and tell us a professor has people coming to lunch and so we 'll get on with that . ’ |
3 | I 'll get on with this then . |
4 | no , no badly but like I just used to think he was so much more chatty than , we just used to sit there and go alright we 'd get off with each other then we 'd break like , you know like try , you 'd , like the conversation |
5 | ‘ Then you could get on with real issues such as a transport policy instead of a scheme to privatise it . |
6 | which I have n't yet got on to cos I wanted to hear most , at least most of the arguments on this aspect of the case , although it 's got very in effect very little to do with the other , other , but it does n't see round , er I could get on with that to a degree , er , so I do n't mind too much , but I think Friday is , is asking to much from Mr |
7 | ‘ I never could get on with those people ; they appear entirely obsessed with sex . |
8 | There were certain weeks when a driver went every night , others when they could get by with three deliveries a week . |
9 | I reckon we could get by with 3 centre backs and blood a youngster if injuries occurred . |
10 | but it was n't like a long thing but like I , the time that I spent with him was like quite a long time , like the evening , whatever , so he 'd get , and like it just used to be constant pauses , it used to be terrible and so we used to get off with each other like you pause for , for what |
11 | She would get on with some work , she told herself firmly . |
12 | And that 's why at that time , near the end of the war , and when the talk of nationalization become greater , the hope of nationalization because as I said before , never in our wildest dream did we think that Labour would get in with such an overwhelming majority . |
13 | ‘ I really ought to get on with some work , ’ she said at last , waveringly . |
14 | ‘ It will close a terrible chapter of history and we can get on with better things . ’ |
15 | We 'll both get out of your lives and then you can get on with that idyllic existence you shared before we ever came to this island . |
16 | When they go home you can get on with some electronic angling with your detector . |
17 | ‘ Maybe then I can get on with some work . |
18 | ‘ If you have finished touring my sitting-room , perhaps we can get on with this . ’ |
19 | So that we can get on with this work . |
20 | ‘ Do n't , ’ suggests an article in Airtime , ‘ take three pairs of shoes , if you can get by with two . ’ |
21 | At one extreme ( for instance , when grass-letting ) you can get by with little more than the dwelling house : at the other ( on an intensively-run livestock farm ) special buildings are essential . |
22 | Inkjets start to print as soon as they receive data ; they do n't need the whole page first so they can get by with much less memory . |
23 | So erm , if you 're looking , if you 're looking for semantic structure , which is any structure such as and you then provide interpretations for parts of sentences and rules are getting sentence meaning from word meaning in the structure , you can get by with crude structures that do n't discriminate very much and the same applies to logic . |
24 | If you want more , go inland ; if you can get by with less , stay in the city ; if you do n't need more than a square foot or so , go to the islands . |
25 | If we select a more suitable set of relations , then we can get by with fewer connectives . |