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. |
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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. |
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Then you're duty bound to do the right thing so you just do what you're told and get on with it. |
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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. |
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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. |
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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. |
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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. |
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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. |
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If you're familiar with the spellchecker in a word processor, you'll get on with this tool instantly. |
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They simply cannot learn to cut their losses, abandon issues they can't win, and get on with it. |
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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. |
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Older people especially are tempted to ignore the whole business and get on with a microchip-free life. |
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Meantime, the true extreme social conservatives get on with their business of murder and butchery on video. |
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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. |
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The fact is I have stated a case, and unless someone seeks to dissolve it, perhaps you should get on with it. |
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They want it over and done with so that they can get on with the next step of their rebuilding process. |
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If, once in a while, we all take responsibility for our own doings maybe then we can all get on with a better life. |
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Again, a student starts to feel trapped, and they're in a house where they don't get on with their housemates. |
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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. |
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It would be so much easier to shut the road and get on with it while the new overbridge was being built. |
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And as a backbencher you will need to allow your successors to get on with that task without undue interference. |
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Something told us that I would need to wear something bright and cheerful to get on with my day. |
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So Parliament must get on with making this new law effective as soon as possible. |
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Right from the start he was very up for it, keen to get on with the lads and hungry for success, and he has integrated really well. |
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But, saying that, it has been pencilled in for a while now and you have got to try and get on with it the best you can. |
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Frankly by Monday you guys are going to have forgotten all of this and I'll get on with my job. |
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Once cooked rinse it immediately in cold water, then let it soak in fresh cold water while you get on with the sauce. |
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You can't really get on with anything useful as you load the printer with paper, collate the copies etc. |
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These ordinary people, trying to get on with their normal working lives under terrible conditions, impotently await their fate. |
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I will make no assumptions that friends with things in common will get on with each other. |
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Following a breakup, a woman is likely to commiserate with her friends for a while and then get on with her life. |
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I'd rather face up to the finality and get on with my life, lonely or not, for as long as it lasts. |
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I mentioned that although he didn't seem to get on with his parents, he always had plenty of pocket money off them. |
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We live in a loft, there are no doors I can close, I've just got to get on with it. |
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They continued talking for a while, when Leila announced she was hungry and that they should get on with the root beer floats. |
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Let's face it, the human body is an extremely freaky thing and we are in denial about this so that we can get on with our lives. |
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It would free up a lot of time for him to get on with the rest of his life. |
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Now it's time to draw back the curtains, open the windows, and get on with it. |
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Nothing much ever happens, the inhabitants just get on with everyday life with the minimum of fuss, stress and excitement. |
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And I'm still wondering if I should just return the thing the get on with my life. |
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The gaffer has spoken to the chairman and told me to just get on with organising everything. |
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The Scot hardly spent any time planning or visualising the climb ahead, preferring just to get on with it. |
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We value time, we are pressed to get on with the job, to deliver the goods, to increase productivity. |
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He said it was important that the very busy base now had to get on with day-to-day life and continue its vital role. |
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There is nothing I can do but get on with things, push as hard as possible and hope our strategists got things right. |
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Let the experts get on with governing the institutions, and let the government stick to its business. |
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Writers could avoid being interrupted in these narrow rooms and could get on with their work. |
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Kimi just looks politely bored, waiting to get on with his interrupted conversation. |
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I continue to urge all concerned to focus and get on with the tasks at hand. |
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It was time to get on with several aspirations that I'd been consistently pushing to one side for several years. |
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Nobody was in a hurry and none was seen prodding the organisers to get on with the item. |
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I think he should pull his head in and get on with the job for a while before he starts mouthing off. |
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We wanted to get on with the job quickly, because metal detectorists were swarming all over the place. |
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Others say they just want stiff punishments handed down and an early end to the trials so they can get on with their lives. |
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The general mood is slight shock, covered by a gritty determination to get on with whatever needs to be done. |
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So lets forget my own personal disasters and get on with the business at hand, that is voting on tomorrows story, start voting now. |
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It shows enterprise and the ability to get on with other people, and these are often better guides to character than academic achievement. |
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The record industry thinks everything is okay while the rest of us get on with our lives. |
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But it's done and dusted now, and I think everyone is just trying to get on with snooker and get the sport going again. |
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They should let doctors get on with doctoring and encourage staff to support them. |
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I learnt to get on with them, I just wanted to be something I wasn't, a bit of a Jack the Lad and it was the start of a rocky ride really. |
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They are quiet, modest individuals that let you get on with your own thing. |
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He tried to get on with life, putting the tragedies behind him and spending as much time with his remaining grandchildren as possible. |
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For our part, we've got to get our heads down and get on with improving the existing network. |
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He enters, apologises bluntly for keeping us waiting, and says he's extremely busy, so let's get on with it. |
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Haley's friend apologised but Bradley kept on about it so Haley told him to stop moaning and get on with his game. |
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Hopefully I'll come back refreshed and with a will to get on with lots of exciting things! |
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She had to harden herself so that she could get on with life instead of acting like a wimp, a selfish wimp at that. |
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Right, that's got the usual wisecrack remark about snowshoes out of the way, now we can get on with things. |
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It was the work of no more than an hour to cut a hop-through and I could get on with the rest of the job. |
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You usually don't have the freedom to do with the property as you want, but we have a laird who has let us get on with it. |
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The new priest didn't get on with young people so the youth club began to deteriorate. |
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It allows people who made stupid mistakes as teenagers and never reoffended to put their past behind them and get on with their lives. |
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But that's life, you have just got to get on with it and I'm happy where I am just now. |
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On the whole, people are happy to let you get on with living your own life. |
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But he has maintained a low profile since the conviction was quashed and now simply wants to get on with life. |
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Stuffing it into her mouth, she grunted and let the cook get on with baking the bread. |
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We are all finding it maddening and frustrating but we are trying to get on with our lives as best we can, and it isn't easy. |
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You've always got the risk in the back of your mind but if you're told to get on with a job, you just do it. |
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I think there's a real sense right across Government of having the bit between our teeth and wanting to get on with it. |
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Having tersely summed up two arguments that I disagree with in various ways, I'll get on with my own argument. |
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Why don't these people just get on with living their lives and leave others to live theirs? |
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Only this time you are older, less immune to the noise and you want to get on with enjoying your own second childhood. |
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So don't waste any more time trying to be a second class somebody else and get on with being a first class you! |
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I thoroughly enjoy what I do and if I'm allowed to get on with building the business I'm quite happy. |
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The place seemed to be full of time-servers and charlatans of one sort and another, and I just didn't get on with it. |
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People here just want to get on with their lives and not bother with a toffee-nosed Tory from the south-east. |
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It's got to be better than stopping people in the street who'll quickly make up any old tosh just to get away and get on with their daily duties. |
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His mindset is to forget the US Open and get on with playing this week and the week after. |
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Then we get on with the mise en place, get the cooking out of the way and get ready for the service. |
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He showed the way out of our despair and gave us the emotional armour to get up every day and get on with our lives. |
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It was a real sickener, but I've got to get on with it now and get playing again. |
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He is keen to emphasise the positives and to look forward and for the industry to stop moping and get on with delivering results. |
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We heard you say you want to get on with your life, but, with all due respect, sir, getting on with our lives isn't an option. |
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The large city bustled with movement, and it seemed everyone was in a hurry to get on with their lives. |
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With a mutter or two the chap retreated into a sulk and decided to get on with his reading material. |
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Society is frankly an unjust place and things go wrong but we have to get on with our lives and deal with them. |
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It made no sense and I was bored silly, just waiting for it to end so we could get on with the scheduled video. |
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Better to just give someone a goblin in jar and let them get on with it. |
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Common law lump sum entitlements allow people to get on with their lives. |
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Of course, over time, you expect that that levels out and we are now at the period where hopefully the coverage will be fifty-fifty and we get on with the election campaign. |
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I keep nagging him to get over it and get on with posting but to no avail. |
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Martine didn't own a kettle so a pan of water had to be boiled, I knew that if Helene needed a cup of coffee it was best to let her get on with it. |
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I learned to make everything fun, not to sweat the small stuff, analyse worries, consider the options, choose one, stop worrying and get on with my life. |
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Some of us like to get on with it instead of whining like ninnies. |
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After confronting mum and dad, I have been able to get on with my life but I still bare the emotional scars and visual torments of dreams and visions. |
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What small businesses need is a body that speaks up for their interests, freeing them to get on with the important job of widget fabrication and processing. |
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Among other things, this will help all parties concerned to exorcise any remaining bad memories of religious conflict, and get on with their lives. |
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Instead of waiting for Buggins' turn, when our business case comes to the top of the pile, we would be able, as a foundation trust, to borrow to get on with it. |
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Although he's clearly still at the rules stage of building the structure into this young garden, Conran is impatient to get on with the fun of messing. |
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Anyway, I'd better stop being a beastly child and get on with it. |
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I didn't get on with that Urban Shamanism type thing, but I do grok it. |
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Before the two could get on with their innocent, child-like play, however, a loud clap of thunder echoed throughout the skies, which had turned dark from a while ago. |
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An analytical mind and the ability to get on with people is essential. |
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Anna, now with a glass eye, is determined to get on with her life. |
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After being demobbed, Columbanus remembers his happiness standing on O'Connell Bridge, being back home and ready to marry and get on with his life. |
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The people I did get on with have all phoned to say bye, including my one senior ally who thought I should never have been made to do those dreaded phone calls. |
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The King gave Haman his signet ring and told him to get on with it. |
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Just when Michele pledged to get on with her life and stop mooning for her mechanical engineer, out of the blue he asked her out for dinner and proposed. |
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She very much appreciated the kindness shown to her by those around her and is determined to get on with her life and to put this horrible experience behind her. |
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Crack a cold one, sit back comfortably, and let's get on with it. |
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They want to put their ordeal behind them and get on with their lives. |
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I then got in touch, or got the office manager to get in touch with the handler and tell him to get on with it because I thought it was their job that was gone off. |
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Terence suggested that we stop wasting time and energy petitioning the authorities for permission to do what we're doing, and simply get on with it. |
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According to the realtor, both had come to see the place as a monument for their misery, so they wanted to get rid of it and get on with their separate lives. |
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You will sit with him until he can learn to cope with that, until he can recognise, okay I'm back in command of myself and now I can get on with it. |
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The answer to that is it depends how well you get on with your teacher! |
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All I wanted was to stay friends and to get on with my life. |
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So I put his books up on a high shelf and tried to get on with the unloveable Red Brigade of deconstructivists and post-structuralists I was supposed to identify with now. |
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Earlier, Miss Brown had said she did not want to proceed with the complaints, did not want to be reconciled with Tyler and wanted to get on with her life. |
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Wellingtonians just get on with things, without fuss or fanfare. |
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Let the lead performers stay downstage facing the audience, tell the chorus to stand still, don't try anything clever and just get on with the singing. |
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While my better half was absorbed in details of converted temples, under-floor heating, and plunge pools, I was able to get on with a little botanising. |
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Wish they'd shut their laughing gear and just get on with it. |
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For a first centrepin, particularly if you feel you might not get on with one and may return to the fixed spool, the Leeds Classic represents excellent value for money. |
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In my case it was Barnacarroll and there was no moaning about the walk just a sturdy determination to get on with it and be there for the great occasion. |
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Your client has described this decision as leaving her in a position of almost living death, a limbo, where she can't really get on with her life. |
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I was working with a really lovely girl who I get on with really well. |
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We can discuss things, but he gets on with his job and I get on with mine. |
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Then of course the product of the catalysis can desorb from the surface and get on with its destiny. |
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It leaves you more money for booze, and your gut can get on with the business of getting you hooched up. |
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As it is, despite the hype, all the captain does is pick a couple of wrong favourites, permutate the pairings and let the players get on with it. |
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Instead, private companies were gifted a PS5bn cheque to share and this clueless government simply let them get on with it. |
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So why not let them take a pneumatic drill into a corrugated iron shed and get on with it? |
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Tory Mr Herbert suggested chief constables should stop moaning on the TV and get on with the job of making savings. |
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Now that the technical difficulties have been taken care of, let's get on with the show! |
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It ought to be necessary to speak mostly the speech that one can best get on with. |
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So, rather than be inhibited and say I can't write because I can't spell, I just write and get on with it. |
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I felt sad that he had left, but I had to snap out of it and get on with my life. |
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She really wanted her son to take his BAC and get on with his life. |
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My boss never lets me get on with my work. He's always breathing down my neck and checking up on me. |
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Her husband could compartmentalise things to get on with everyday life, but she couldn't, she reveals. |
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Now the children have gone, perhaps I can get on with my work in peace. |
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We'll just have to get on with it and plug away from start to finish. |
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They should blend into the background and get on with their jobs quietly. |
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I don't find it funny, I find it a bit sick, and I find it very cruel, and I just wish people would get on with their own lives and let me get on with mine. |
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Don't be a sorehead! Forgive, forget and get on with your life. |
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