We had three nights and two days ahead of us to settle in and get to know the ship. |
|
The characters get to know each other with no assurance that a romance will follow. |
|
It allowed American and Soviet astronauts to work together and to get to know each other. |
|
From February 10th, televiewers will get to know the ten candidates throughout short 1 min 15 sec reports. |
|
It is important to read and speak and write Thai, then really get to know the country. |
|
If your machine was purchased second-hand, this is a good time to get to know your local dealer. |
|
Take time to get to know him, and by all means, let him get to know the true-blue you. |
|
In fact, that's the perfect way to get to know this moderately priced, easy-to-love restaurant. |
|
It is usually understood that in order for us to get to know each other, we should talk about sports, politics, and other issues of the day. |
|
Perhaps it is you that corrupts whatever guy you get to know since we all seem destined for the slammer! |
|
If you experience the redness and flaking of chronic dry skin, dermatitis, and eczema, get to know borage oil, extracted from the borage plant. |
|
The dialogue is a little quippy and smart-arsed right now, but I'm sure it will settle down as we get to know the various characters. |
|
They all either know each other or will get to know each other, sooner or later. |
|
I like to participate in company activities outside working hours, as it is a good way to get to know your colleagues better. |
|
From a social point of view it is an ideal place to get to know people who may become friends or even a future partner. |
|
Those who think numismatics is a dull subject might be inclined to change their minds once they get to know about the details of this storehouse. |
|
Her green eyes looked at me, and we sniffed each other to get to know one another's scents. |
|
At the end of week one, the five couples organise a big night out to the local club, to get to know one another. |
|
He was right, of course, and standing there in the dark, with just a street light to light us, I felt a weird desire to get to know him. |
|
During meetings we'll take leisurely strolls along pedestrian friendly streets and get to know our neighbors. |
|
|
My question is, when you get to know the little stuff, does the big stuff really matter? |
|
It certainly adds to the enjoyment, making the Vanquish an easier car to get to know. |
|
My patients that get to know me like that I don't sugar-coat things and let them know what is going on. |
|
Poetry should be brief, whimsical verse about a certain cutie patootie you'd like to get to know better. |
|
I hope that you all will get to know him and allow him to join our wonderful clique. |
|
The regular corporate structure is so impersonal, they don't get to know the artist. |
|
Few great players get to know links courses, though, without coming to love them. |
|
As you slowly move in the crowd, you get to know how innovation could be infused into exchange offers. |
|
It took a while to get to know each other well enough to actually confide in one another. |
|
Residential architects get to know their clients much more intimately than do our commercial counterparts. |
|
If we're going to be a couple up at camp then we should at least get to know each other a bit better. |
|
They are all such interesting looking free spirits, I've been itching to get to know them, but my attempts at friendliness have been ignored. |
|
We get to know, furtively yet intimately, a disparate group of six American women. |
|
We get back to my place where he drops off his things and we crack open a bottle of wine and get to know each other. |
|
Few of the massed ranks of skiers discussing last night's disco at the restaurant get to know the delights of skiing over fresh powder. |
|
When you young daters are considering a long-term commitment, you have to get to know the parents. |
|
The shy dater can open up and get to know a person without having to deal with first-date jitters that often come from fear of the unknown. |
|
After several pre-production meetings to get to know one another, we began filming. |
|
The people are prickly on the outside, but a lot friendlier once you get to know them. |
|
One of these nobles chooses to drift from the others to get to know this vibrant peasant girl. |
|
|
Better still, it provided the facilities to get to know them better and we grasped the opportunity to quiz some of this year's new faces. |
|
It's different from acute medicine in that you do get to know families very well indeed. |
|
Turn dinner time into intense talk time and really let them get to know you better. |
|
It hopes to organise similar competitions and art camps in the premises so that more people would get to know the institution's environs. |
|
In this job you get to know people from many walks of life and professions. |
|
I have a regular watering hole, so you do get to know the staff who work there. |
|
We're well and truly all mixed up now and it's a case of trying to get to know everyone again. |
|
You decide what kind of information you want to give out, and you start to get to know each other better. |
|
They will have a regular beat and get to know such people as head teachers and shopkeepers. |
|
This is also when you can get to know the personality and character of your prospective sitter. |
|
Also, I'm so stubborn and perverse that her rudeness just made me more determined to get to know her. |
|
At times he can be really sincere, but until you get to know him he's a real pest. |
|
It will be worth your while to come and get to know other members where you will get a warm welcome. |
|
Boaters get to know the lakers by name and recognize their silhouettes, even their whistle sounds. |
|
You'd get to know them, and pretty soon we were just like anybody else hanging out in the yard. |
|
There will be plenty of free time to relax, enjoy Africa, get to know local people. |
|
As well as reserved seats, buses have regular drivers, so they and pupils can get to know each other. |
|
In prison you are locked up for long periods of time and there is no time to get to know the staff. |
|
The conversation led in such a way that the only way to get to know her better was to ask her out on a date. |
|
Now to get to know him well, it doesn't matter if it's a stillborn baby or a 95-year-old grandfather, what I need to bring from inside of me is the value of doing this. |
|
|
We could eat out somewhere and get to know each other if you want. |
|
You can get to know them even better if you steam the letters open first. |
|
A decision by the Hydes in 1955 to take an extended visit to Japan was tied in with the wish to get to know another great bookman, Shigeo Sorimachi. |
|
I think it's very important a lollipop man should live in the area he patrols because then he knows the community and they get to know and trust him. |
|
Although I wasn't one for wanting to socialize during this hard time, I guessed that I'd better get to know the people I'd be rooming with over the next two weeks. |
|
As a result, those who practise Karate get to know themselves better, are able to make sound judgments and achieve stable emotions even under trying circumstances. |
|
Ruseva told Bulgarian reporters that she would like to take Maria back and care for her, or at least get to know her. |
|
I think this is the season we get to know a few of these no-name players. |
|
It takes a while for players to get to know each other and get pally. |
|
She said students were not required to come in pairs for the ball, because this would hamper the aim of holding the event, to help students get to know each other better. |
|
Children will also get to know what, and if, their favourite toons eat. |
|
You feel you get to know all the characters and their quirks, the island and its people, and the magic and superstitions come to life in an burst of colour. |
|
Both peoples need time to lick their wounds, get to know each other as something other than Evil, and build confidence. |
|
As I left with an agitated employer, Kemp encouraged me to reach out to him if I wanted to get to know him better. |
|
You don't get to know someone by jumping into bed with them. |
|
However, if you take the time to get to know her, you'll quickly realize that there's much more than meets the eye beneath the surface of this pool shark. |
|
What better way for a man of means and intellect to get to know the real dilemmas and down-to-earth problems of the people he so gallantly serves? |
|
Join the group and get to know others in a warm and supportive atmosphere. |
|
Part of the problem is that the egocentricity of childhood means that it sometimes takes years for us to really get to know our mothers as people. |
|
I'll admit that Tom opened the door for me, but I had to buddy up with them and get to know them just like everybody else before they let me into their little circle. |
|
|
But then they get to know me and just think I'm a big fat blowhard. |
|
By listening in on their conversation, we get to know the narrator, Asa Baker-Rouse, and the filmmaker, Bianca Giaever. |
|
The guys are really trying to get to know each other right now. |
|
He's quite shy but once you get to know him he's quite friendly. |
|
How you really get to know a man, however, is by spending a week skiing, boating, hunting or fishing with him. |
|
Thankfully, his music as bleachers helps you get to know him. |
|
You can get to know and like this other side tomorrow morning at 10am when you can join in with a morning workout with Zumba. |
|
Attend union branch meetings at the place of your employment, get to know your organiser and get aquatinted with your union branch officials. |
|
Over several rounds of drinks we get to know all about the barman, the garageman, the handyman and the businessman. |
|
Players get to know how a manager operates and behaves, the kidology he uses and what he is all about. |
|
In the days before miniature scores and recordings were available, it was not easy for young composers to get to know new music. |
|
Spokesman Ron De Jong of the conservative organization Grassfire said that Patty Compean is concerned that her husband might not ever get to know his children. |
|
Attendees will also have the opportunity to get to know and learn fun facts about the sociable Bearded Dragon, distinctive Ball Python and colorful Veiled Chameleon. |
|
Banff audiences will be taken on a journey around the globe as they get to know the remarkable characters behind the hair raising on-screen action sports. |
|
Thrust together in a small vehicle for hours, or even days, they would have no choice but to get to know each other and the result might be a Chauceresque exchange of stories. |
|
Walls are lined with quirky nicknacks and piled books, like you've wandered into the home of someone interesting you'd like to get to know better. |
|
Although Janes and Thomas had been to the same school, Janes was some three years older than Thomas so they didn't get to know each other until after their schooldays. |
|
We have found that the local 3-D fun shoots are great places to get to know your equipment and arrow trajectory before the moment of truth arrives. |
|
He said he had an opportunity to get to know Zachary on Aug. |
|
I get to know some other girls while waiting to use the bogs. |
|
|
See that man over there? He's sound. You should get to know him. |
|
We also get to know about their food pattern from the direct or indirect evidence that we get, be it in the form of a pugmark or the dropping of its excreta. |
|