1215 examples of get over in sentences

"There's a place down at the other end where we can get over," said Jack.

" "Why, yes, Mrs. Abbott, the Effinghams insisted on it, and I could not well get over the sacrifice, after having been their shipmate so long.

thatbut I'm too young to be sureand I'll get over this all right.

I am a coward, I know, about hearing of animals' pains, but I must get over it, I want to know how they suffer.

The only means of escape was by the Rue Saint Sauveur, and to reach the corner of the Rue Saint Sauveur it was necessary to get over the lower part of the barricade, which left nearly the whole of the fugitives unprotected.

Tell me now, what you do and why you have to spoil everything?" demanded Kaetheli, rather huffed, for she could not yet get over the fact that she had crawled all for nothing into the incomparable hiding-place in the goat-shed.

Who could get over those roots, or through the scrub which stood stilted on them, letting down at every yard or two fresh air-roots from off its boughs, to add fresh tangle, as they struck into the mud, to the horrible imbroglio?

I shall never get over itnever.

But as she had a few hours' leisure for reflection before the post went out, she had time to get over her anger, and to remember that promise of obedience given, half in jest, half in earnest, at the little inn beyond Dunmail Raise.

"Give her time to get over her tantrums.

I can't get over the injustice of the poor kid's paying so hard when he was just trying to do the decent, hard, right thing.

Some day I will get over it!"

I suppose I must try to get over my feeling.' CHAPTER X

VI Bambi announced the next morning that she had to have an entire day in which to get over "Damaged Goods."

When Lincoln walked into New Salem, three months later, he was not altogether a stranger, for the people remembered him as the ingenious flatboat-man who, a little while before, had freed his boat from water (and thus enabled it to get over the dam) by resorting to the miraculous expedient of boring a hole in the bottom.

She had never been told about the accident, in the hope that she would outgrow the shock and get over the fear, but she had never outgrown it.

I cannot get over the wonder of it.

Our sense of revenge is as exact as our mathematical faculty, and until both terms of the equation are satisfied we cannot get over the sense of something left undone.

Don't you want to get over the fence and stroll up one of the rows?

The big, good-natured African, known as Inkspot, had been on watch, and, being himself so very black that he was not generally noticeable in the dark, was standing on a part of the deck from which, without being noticed himself, he saw a person get over the taffrail and slip into the water.

After that there came another period of waiting very difficult to get over.

" "That was my first trip; it took me a long time to get over my scared feelin', but I finally did, and I soon found myself goin' back across the river, with two and three people, and sometimes a whole boatload.

If the child dies, I really think he will not get over it.

One little chorus boy, especially, though he professed a personal devotion of the tenderest kind for me, could never quite get over those doves, and his romantic sentiments cooled considerably when I gained my proud position as dove-bearer.

He felt he would say anything to comfort her, and get over the chance of some one seeing this hateful exhibition.

1215 examples of  get over  in sentences