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get around

VERB
  1. be a social swinger; socialize a lot
  2. be released or become known; of news
    News of her death broke in the morning
  3. avoid something unpleasant or laborious
    You cannot bypass these rules!
  4. move around; move from place to place
    How does she get around without a car?

How To Use get around In A Sentence

  • I think you could get aroundthe police strategy discussed above by Orin Kerr arrest the potential non-consenting guy first with this sort of blanket prohibition. The Volokh Conspiracy » Does Georgia v. Randolph Apply to Computers?
  • Hopefully not by me. * hint hint, prod prod* I should probably get around to subbing those in-game movies too. Anime Nano!
  • There are the people who walk three abreast and really slowly forcing you to lower your pace until you spot a chance to get around them.
  • To get around logjams, around dams and around shallow places, they unload their gear and carry the boat to the next put-in; then they backtrack to get the gear.
  • To get around this he would have only a double string quintet play during a very quiet flute or oboe solo.
  • I was sitting in Panera Bread last night, fumbling around with proxies in an attempt to get around their ham-fisted network filtering.
  • Any chance at all that you'll get around to reporting that Obama will televise directly into the classrooms next Tuesday and that the government is suggesting that teachers work with students to write out how they can "help the President". Obama to address joint session of Congress next week
  • To get around conventional limitations, the researchers sculpted an array of sub-wavelength-wide grooves (dubbed a metamaterial) directly on the facet of quantum cascade lasers. The Engineer - News
  • Although tobacco ads are prohibited, companies get around the ban by sponsoring music shows.
  • Most residents use bicycles to get around. Times, Sunday Times
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