Идиомы и фразеологизмы английского со словом get. Страница тринадцать

Словосочетания со словом get. Страница тринадцать

1
...
1112
13
1415
...
27
get off
To come down from or out of.
The ladder fell, and Tom couldn't get off the roof.
The bus stopped, the door opened, and Father got off.
To take off.
Joe's mother told him to get his wet clothes off.
To get away; leave.
Mr. Johnson goes fishing whenever he can get off from work.
William got off early in the morning.
To go free.
Mr. Andrews got off with a $5 fine when he was caught passing a stop sign.
To make (something) go.
The halfback got off a lung pass.
John got a letter off to his grandmother.
To tell.
The governor got off several jokes at the beginning of his speech.
get on like a house on fire
Сблизиться; крепко подружиться.
It was a perfect marriage. They got on like a house on fire.
Это был идеальный брак. Они жили душа в душу.
get on one's nerves
bug
To make you nervous; to annoy or disturb.
John's noisy eating habits get on your nerves.
Children get on their parents' nerves by asking so many questions.
Laura loves to talk to anyone. Sometimes her chatter really gets on my nerves.
Jack asked his neighbor to turn down the stereo because it was bugging him and he couldn’t concentrate.
get on the stick
To get moving; to stop being idle and to start working vigorously.
All right, man, let's get on the stick!
get on to one
To figure someone out; understand what someone else is up to.
The FBI is getting on to Jim's secret trading with the enemy.
get on
get onto
To speak to (someone) roughly about something he did wrong; blame; scold.
Mrs. Thompson got on the girls for not keeping their rooms clean.
The fans got on the new shortstop after he made several errors.
To grow older.
Work seems harder these days; I'm getting on, you know.
get one down
To make (someone) unhappy; cause low spirits; cause discouragement.
Low grades are getting Helen down.
Three straight losses got the team down.
To swallow; digest.
The medicine was so bitter I couldn't get it down.
To depress a person's spirit.
Working at such an awful job got Mike down.
get one wrong
take one wrong
To misinterpret; misunderstand another.
Don't get me wrong; I didn 't mean to criticize you.