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How to use get on with in a sentence

Looking for sentences with "get on with"? Here are some examples.

Sentence Examples
When the voices speak to him, they tell him how to get on with his poetry, not how the rest of the people from the North can get on with life.
I'd been flying unpowered hang gliders for 12 years and I didn't know if I could get on with having an engine attached to me.
Then you're duty bound to do the right thing so you just do what you're told and get on with it.
Most of the day, though, Dolly's been snoozing, taking over the bed and demanding to be left alone to get on with some serious nap time.
So it's time to put my strong head on, brace myself and get on with the matter in hand of hopefully offering some support where I can.
When your nose is redder than a cherry sno-cone and your eyes are as puffy as marshmallows, you're ready to get on with your life.
Maybe you like the peace and solitude of the early hours of the morning so that you can get on with various important tasks uninterrupted.
The way I look at it, if you have a disability, then you can either lie in bed and feel sorry for yourself, or you get up and get on with it.
If you're familiar with the spellchecker in a word processor, you'll get on with this tool instantly.
They simply cannot learn to cut their losses, abandon issues they can't win, and get on with it.
There are also few new experiences for you, just the humdrum of daily life and the loneliness of having to get on with it on your own.
Older people especially are tempted to ignore the whole business and get on with a microchip-free life.
Meantime, the true extreme social conservatives get on with their business of murder and butchery on video.
Since I crossed out those cliches you're probably wondering when am I going to get on with the guy and all his nummy, yummy goodness.
The fact is I have stated a case, and unless someone seeks to dissolve it, perhaps you should get on with it.
They want it over and done with so that they can get on with the next step of their rebuilding process.
If, once in a while, we all take responsibility for our own doings maybe then we can all get on with a better life.
If I have to testify I ask that it be done as soon as possible, because I just want to get this over and done with and get on with my life.
It would be so much easier to shut the road and get on with it while the new overbridge was being built.
And as a backbencher you will need to allow your successors to get on with that task without undue interference.
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Examples from Classical Literature
By the way, how did you get on with your photographing yesterday afternoon, Archie?
Mademoiselle Deschamps, who was only a figurante, contrived to get on with a salary of only sixteen pounds.
Marilda undertook the care of the children at the rood, but she could not get on with them.
I want breath and time to discuss this banquet as it deserves, and am too eager to get on with my story.
How was she going to get on with such jolty, jerky, bossy people?
What made it possible for everybody to get on with our poor dear Allegre was his complete, equable, and impartial contempt for all mankind.
Decidedly, Sir Wingrave Seton was not an easy man to get on with.
Well, Hetty, if I am to speak candidly, I must say that I have known Sidney Trefusis for a long time, and he is the easiest person to get on with I ever met.
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