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Get up– wake up / stand from bed
I get up at 7 every morning.
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Get on– enter (bus, train) / have a good relationship
She got on the bus. / We get on well.
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Get off– leave (bus, train)
He got off at the next stop.
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Get in– enter (car, taxi)
Get in the car, we’re late.
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Get out– leave / exit
Get out of the room!
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Get over– recover from something
It took her weeks to get over the flu.
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Get through– finish / succeed in contacting
I finally got through to him.
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Get along– have a good relationship
They get along very well.
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Get back– return
When did you get back from your trip?
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Get away– escape / go on holiday
We need to get away for the weekend.
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Get by– manage (with difficulty)
He gets by on a small salary.
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Get across– communicate an idea clearly
The teacher got the message across.
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Get ahead– succeed / progress
She works hard to get ahead in her career.
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Get together– meet socially
Let’s get together this weekend.
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Get rid of– remove
I need to get rid of old clothes.
The post 15 common phrasal verbs with “get”, with examples: appeared first on Dana Bilim Merkezi.
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