Sentences with get
get
G g - The boys were getting bored. [VERB adjective]
- Half the pleasure of an evening out is getting ready. [VERB adjective]
- With low blood flow, it's difficult to get the active ingredients to the area to reduce the cellulite.
- Learn all the controversial strategies and steps to get your ex back.
- I don't know if I can get it clean. [VERB noun adjective]
- ...a long campaign to get U.S. politicians to take the Aids epidemic more seriously. [VERB noun to-infinitive]
- I will give you the pro's and con's of this process and what to watch out for when interviewing a company to help you get out of debt.
- In most of its uses get is a fairly informal word. Gotten is an American form of the past tense and past participle.
- I might benefit from getting my teeth fixed. [VERB noun -ed]
- I got off the bed and opened the door. [VERB preposition/adverb]
- Generally I get to work at 9.30am. [VERB + to]
- Mack got his wallet out. [VERB noun with adverb]
- Does she ever get asked for her autograph? [AUXILIARY -ed]
- Miller and Ferlinghetti got to be friends. [VERB to-infinitive]
- How do these people get to be the bosses of major companies? [VERB to-infinitive]
- I aim to be off the lake before dawn, so let's get moving. [VERB verb-ing]
- We haven't got to the stage of a full-scale military conflict. [VERB + to]
- Radical factions say the talks are getting nowhere and they want to withdraw. [VERB adverb]
- It got to after 1am and I was exhausted. [VERB + to]
- That's the first time I lost my cool in 20 years in this job. This whole thing's getting to me. [VERB + to]
- What gets me is the attitude of so many of the people. [VERB noun]
- I got a job at the sawmill. [VERB noun]
- I'm getting a bike for my birthday. [VERB noun]
- I came down this morning to get the newspaper. [VERB noun]
- She was getting breakfast as usual. [VERB noun]
- You could run that race again and get a different result each time. [VERB noun]
- He can't get a good price for his crops. [VERB noun + for]
- You get time to think in prison. [VERB noun]
- I get the feeling that you're an honest man. [VERB noun]
- Charles got a shock when he saw him. [VERB noun]
- Young men climbed on buses and fences to get a better view. [VERB noun]
- Riyadh got 25 mm of rain in just 12 hours. [VERB noun]
- Did you get that joke, Ann? I'll explain later. [VERB noun]
- When I was five I got measles. [VERB noun]
- It'll be two pounds to get the bus. [VERB noun]
- Take it easy. We've got him. He's not going to kill anyone else. [VERB noun]
- We don't get a paper. [VERB noun]
- I only get Channel 7. [VERB noun]
- He got a chill at the picnic
- The police finally got him
- To get a window open
- get off the bus
- How did you get to be captain?
- To get a meal
- I didn't get your meaning
- We got home safely
- To get a train
- get him to leave at once
- Add 2 and 2 and you will get 4
- That music really gets me
- Her high voice gets me
- The blow got him in the back
- Your extravagant habits will get you in the end
- get moving
- To get home early
- To get Paris
- Go get your books
- Add 2 and 2 to get 4
- get him to leave
- get the door to shut properly
- To get one's hands dirty
- get the copy to the printer
- To get ten years for robbery
- To get lunch
- He's got to pass the test
- He's got red hair
- His illness finally got him
- The blow got him in the eye
- Her singing gets me
- get the look on his face
- To get to work on time
- To get caught in the rain, get in touch with me
- To get a birthday present; to get a pension.
- To get a good price after bargaining; to get oil by drilling; to get information.
- Would you get the milk from the refrigerator for me?
- To get one's hair cut; to get a person drunk; to get a fire to burn; to get a dog out of a room.
- You can always get me by telephone.
- I didn't get your last name.
- To get a lesson.
- Get him before he escapes!
- To get a spanking; to get 20 years in jail.
- We'll get him to go with us.
- To get dinner.
- Her pleas got me.
- The bullet got him in the leg.
- I'll get you yet!
- He got malaria while living in the tropics. She gets butterflies before every performance.
- Their silly remarks get me.
- I don't get the joke. This report may be crystal-clear to a scientist, but I don't get it.
- To get home late.
- You get to meet a lot of interesting people.
- To get angry; to get sick.
- To get married; to get elected; to get hit by a car.
- I don't get into town very often.
- Can he get through another bad winter?
- He told us to get.
- To get moving; Get rolling.
- The get of a stallion.
- What's your week's get?
- When will you get back?
- They wanted to get going on the construction of the house.
- You'll get it for breaking that vase!
- A rock group really getting it on with the audience.
- After years of indifference, she's getting off on baseball.
- He wanted to be a millionaire but he died before he got there.
- To get together a portfolio of 20 stocks.
- To get up an exhibit.
- She's got a new car. Have you got the tickets?