Example sentences of "[vb mod] get [adv prt] in the " in BNC.

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1 Even an agreement about the time you might get up in the morning , and who gets up first , for instance , is important .
2 I just go to bed at night and hope for a miracle that I 'll get up in the morning
3 He said : ‘ The only way he 'll get back in the England setup is by getting promotion . ’
4 It 'll take a good year before she 'll get back in the swing of everything .
5 Occasionally I 'd get up in the morning and there he 'd be in the kitchen , eating furiously , as if he did n't know where his next grub was coming from , as if each day was an adventure that could end anywhere .
6 I 'd get up in the morning I 'd have my two pieces of wholemeal bread toasted with a scraping of marmalade on , right , and my butter cos I like that .
7 That took care of Strathtummel ; Atholl would get Up in the morning to find half his country crumbling under his feet .
8 And there was pain as well as pride in working right to the end , as did the 99-year-old Suffolk widow who ‘ worked on the land all her life ’ or the Derbyshire midwife in her eighties who still ‘ would get up in the night and walk miles to attend a confinement . ’
9 On the three mornings each week when we were n't due to train , Graham and I would get up in the cool sun of early morning at seven and play either golf or tennis .
10 Wherever he went in the house , he carried reams of calculations and sometimes would get up in the middle of a meal because he suspected that his calculator was at fault .
11 I would get up in the morning , step out of my caravan , face the ocean and do my exercises , followed by my ritual routine .
12 Manifestations can vary enormously from one individual to another ; a sufferer may — or may not — forget how to wash , dress , eat , go to the lavatory , get up or go to bed ; be disorientated in time and place ( for example , may get up in the middle of the night , or may wander away from home and be unable to find his or her way back ) ; forget the social conventions of politeness , and may therefore become aggressive or rude ( or over-friendly ) ; forget how to communicate , and even his or her own or other people 's identity .
13 ‘ I 'm thinking of the sort of attitude that suggests the unemployed do too little to help themselves , that if only you have determination and drive you can get on in the world . ’
14 Children can get out in the open to see for themselves .
15 Ah maybe when you can get out in the summer
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