Example sentences of "got on [prep] [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 It was almost as small as the circle of names and acquaintances of the average senior civil servant , and was reduced further by the fact that once they had got on to a board , many businessmen rapidly came to resent the amount of time the job demanded .
2 Sitting in the dreary Independence Hotel in Tehran late at night , McFarlane fuming in his room , the rest of the party had got on to a conversation about radars .
3 But we had got on to a subject I do happen to know something about .
4 He might have got on to the motorway . ’
5 It had been he himself , Lewis , who had finally got on to the man there who was in the process of completing the proofs for the forthcoming seminal opus entitled Pre-Conquest Craftsmanship in Southern Britain , by Theodore S. Kemp , MA , DPhil ; the man who had been closeted with Kemp that fateful morning , and who had confirmed that Kemp had not left the offices until about 12.30 p.m .
6 How had he got on to the subject of Yasser Arafat ?
7 Why had he got on to the subject of Yasser Arafat ?
8 Other medieval houses that are replicated medieval houses just have n't got on to the textiles in the way that we have .
9 Once I 'd got on to the continent I 'd walk there if I had to .
10 When Toby had gone , the headmaster got on to the organizer of the Championships .
11 Over the last seven months , Lawrence has quietly got on with a rebuilding job at Ayresome Park .
12 By that time I 'd really stopped noticing whether people are male or female and just got on with the physics .
13 Then she wonders why we have n't got on with the work .
14 It was amazing that someone who had won the British Open three times and come second once over the past four years should have to qualify , but the boss just got on with the job .
15 ‘ He 's got on with the job in a pleasant and professional manner .
16 It was the House of Commons , and the Cabinet and the Prime Minister that came from the Commons , that Bagehot saw as the efficient working parts of the Constitution as these got on with the job of actually running the show .
17 There are plenty of ‘ success stories ’ where governments have not intervened , or where it has not even been acknowledged that farmers and pastoralists have quietly got on with the business of conservation for themselves , and frequently provided sustainable surpluses for the market as well .
18 All but he wanted to know how Stephen had got on with the police .
19 Perhaps f just wanted to go back to find out why f had n't got on with the place when everyone else had !
20 ‘ What have you got on under the leather stuff ? ’
21 ‘ You 'd both have got on like a house on fire .
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