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get into

VERB
  1. secure a place in a college, university, etc.
  2. familiarize oneself thoroughly with
    He really got into semantics
  3. get involved in or with
  4. put clothing on one's body
    The princess donned a long blue dress
    What should I wear today?
    The queen assumed the stately robes
    He got into his jeans
    He put on his best suit for the wedding
  5. to come or go into
    the boat entered an area of shallow marshes

How To Use get into In A Sentence

  • You usually need three A levels to get into university.
  • You usually need three A levels to get into university.
  • Come now , don't get into a tantrum . You must beauty sleep for the photographer tomorrow.
  • Tomorrow, if I were lusting for cash and recognition and all the things people get into broadcasting for, I might decide talk radio was my easiest point of access.
  • Another party I fell in with said you could generally always get bread; and the thing to do was to break a plateglass window and get into gaol; seemed rather a brilliant scheme. The Wrong Box
  • While things are bad now, I've noticed that blue collar families that had jobs during the boom, but couldn't afford to get into one of the overprices houses are now snatching up foreclosures, fixing them up and living the dream. Current.com top stories
  • Shares are currently trading at $0.68, so this is an excellent time to get into the market.
  • Support, guidance, training, how to get new clients, and how to get into the cycles-really specific suggestions.
  • Some kind of creeper was even growing across the windowpane, trying to get into the house. READY?
  • I would also like to get into health care stocks; how should I proceed?
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