2785 examples of get on in sentences

' She heartily agreed, and they began to get on beautifully again, when she suddenly said to him: 'Is it true you were seen talking in the park to that girl Miss Turnbull, on Sunday?' 'If you say I was seen, I was.

Charlie Conroy was a young man who had made up his mind to get on socially.

Potatoes get on best in sandy soil, I'm sure of thatbut plant before you boil; Then put in strawberries; that's what I do Confound you for a blockhead!

If I could get on horseback, I should be all right again.

" Then, seeing the city doctor, whom they recognized, "Excuse the interruption, but we can't get on without Dr. Clay, he's the whole works of the lacrosse team.

"Let me get on with my story.

I've been figuring that I'm the only man who can get on his back.

And if he'd only get on a little faster.

I wished to get on, to see how we were to be lodged, and how we were to get a boat; all which I thought I could best settle myself, without his having any trouble.

Wilbur, get on the job and skid out the liquids.

We had got but a few miles from the village when he dropped, and could not get on; and I was unwilling and ashamed to turn back, having so little to pay for lodgings.

You go and get on with your work, Charles, and p'r'aps by the time your moustache 'as grown big enough to be seen, you'll 'ear something.

The freshman class wagged its head knowingly and said: "I told you they couldn't get on without March," and held its head higher for that one of its members was a Varsity player.

But how are we to get on board?

I wondered how he could get on; but Mr. Hardinge felt himself a servant of the altar, standing in his master's house, and ready to submit to his will.

Get on to themright and left flanktell them they're to stand fast.

"We shall get on together, I see," said Marmaduke, jumping into the cab.

Mamma says I'm to go to college, and be a clergyman; so I must get on with my Latin.

If he was well and strong, he could get on first-rate, but he wouldn't get about half so much if I didn't take him.

A few days before the interviewer had had a visit from a couple of colored women who had "heard tell how you is investigating the old people.been trying to get on old age pension for a long timeglad you come to get us on.

"Just lead your horse underneath, so that I can get on to his back, thence to the ground quite easily," I said.

The whole tendency of his education had been to make him into a shy man: he could not get on with people; with an unquenchable thirst for love in his heart, he had never yet dared to look a woman in the face.

She read everything she could get on the subject, wrote some effective articles for the anti-slavery papers, and pondered night and day over the question of what more she could do.

They were all searched, but they however contrived to get on board four pistols, which were all the arms they had for the enterprise, though Fourgette had 20 hands on board, and his small arms on the awning, to be in readiness.

"To hear people speak," said Goethe, "one would almost believe that they were of opinion that God had withdrawn into silence since those old times, and that man was now placed quite upon his own feet, and had to see how he could get on without God and his daily invisible breath.

2785 examples of  get on  in sentences