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Get on in a sentence

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Sentence count:174+11Posted:2016-07-18Updated:2020-07-24
Synonym: advanceagebe onbestrideboardclimb oncome alongcome onget alongget along withget on withhop onjump onmaturatematuremountmount upprogresssenesceshape upSimilar words: get on withtonesit onbuttonact onput onat oncerest onMeaning: v. 1. have smooth relations 2. get on board of (trains, buses, ships, aircraft, etc.) 3. get on the back of 4. grow late or (of time) elapse 5. appear in a show, on T.V. or radio 6. develop in a positive way 7. grow old or older. 
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151. It appears to be a board-room decision and not his so let's not get on his back too quick.
152. And they say bikes are too complicated to get on board.
153. Now, other politicians on the campaign trail and on Capitol Hill are scrambling to get on the economic insecurity bandwagon.
154. To a certain degree, the rush to get on line boils down to simple economics.
155. Money is the root of all evil, and yet it is such a useful root that we cannot get on without it any more than we can without potatoes. Louisa May Alcott 
156. They hurried to end any conversation and get on their way.
157. Men thus instructed often found it easier to get on with it than to try and explain the danger all over again.
158. I get on with it over lunch - a sandwich and a green apple from the canteen, eaten at my desk.
159. Two bloody wars and we're still content to snooze and let that lot get on with it.
160. The alternative, of course, is to buckle down and get on with playing the game by Westminster's rules.
161. This time, he convinced himself, he would confront his fears and get on with his life.
162. To get on the Net, you simply connect your computer to any of these networked computers via an Internet Service Provider.
163. If you get on the wrong side of Miss Trunchbull she can liquidise you like a carrot in a kitchen blender.
164. If they'd wanted to get on the telly they should have trained as chefs.
165. Share a professional concern with a close confidante or intimate Saturday,(Sentence dictionary) but come Sunday you must get on your soapbox.
166. Far more than the shield is the pleasure I get on the field... The joy of the chase is greater than the result of the race. RVM 
167. Sometimes when you innovate, you make mistakes. It is best to admit them quickly, and get on with improving your other innovations. Steve Jobs 
168. Get on your knees and pray, then get on your feet and work. Gordon B. Hinckley 
169. After driving around for some time with no success I decided that I must get on my way.
170. The bloke who'd wanted to get on with it started to climb out of the front seat.
171. Dare they call her bluff and just let her get on with whatever she thought she could do to inconvenience them?
172. It is exactly the kind of thing a truly determined and environmentally conscious government could get on with and do.
173. There is a lot of competition to get on to this programme.
174. Most of the 'help' messages you get on computers aren't at all clear to ordinary home users.
More similar words: get on withtonesit onbuttonact onput onat oncerest oncottonwait oncount onbutton upcomment onat one timeall at onceautonomyreport onlet outsee tolet offget outget offcome todue toset outset offtake toget out ofhave toget over
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