1. get on with
Stop talking and get on with your work.
Be quiet and get on with your homework. / The teacher asked the pupils to get on with some work quietly as she had to leave the classroom. / How are you getting on with your Spanish lessons?
How do you get on with your brothers and sisters?
I get on with my mister.
wich of your sisters you get on with?
I often don't have enough time to actually get on with my work
After he left we were able to get on with our normal lives again.
After coffee break we have to get on with the meeting.
I can't help you now. I need to get on with the cooking.
I don’t get on with Anna. She’s really annoying.
I get on with Alice really well. She is such a friendly girl.
I'm just impatient to get on with my life
I don't get on with people who are moody and pessimistic.
Do you get on with your neighbours?
She doesn't get on with her brother, they argue all the time.
2. go into
Lisa enjoys arguing with people, so she decided to go into law.
I go into the restaurant.
3. address
What's your address?
This is to inform you of my address change. Please update your mailing list.
We are afraid that our new address is not registered on your database.
If you write your address on a web-page, anybody can find out where you live if the whim takes them.
A woman is capable of failing to notice the hundred things that you've done her, and to address only the one that you haven't.
Kindly address yourself to the chairman, not directly to other representatives at this meeting.
Almost all implementations of virtual memory divide the virtual address space of an application program into pages; a page is a block of contiguous virtual memory addresses.
I switch on my laptop, start up the browser, and type in the address I've already learnt by heart.
There was a bug in my Address Book and many addresses including yours were deleted.
Pages are usually at least 4 KiB (4×1024 bytes) in size, and systems with large virtual address ranges or large amounts of real memory generally use larger page sizes.
Our products address the needs of real users. She turned to address the man on her left. Marlowe now addressed himself to the task of searching the room. The issue of funding has yet to be addressed.
But answering them took up the time and energy he needed for his writing, so that he was rather relieved that W.S. had given no address.
It is very important that you address all the clients concerns and questions when presenting your ideas and offer the client practical and affordable solutions for example to create adequate and clever storage solutions.
It is vitally important that you develop strong presentation skills starting with being able to address groups or individuals.
4. take up
I thought I'd take up fishing...
In my defence, all I can say is, you do take up a lot of space.
take up a hobby\sport
take up swimming / take up a career as an actor
Computers used to take up a whole room, and now you can carry one in your pocket.
I'd like to take up Spanish so that I can go to Argentina for a holiday.
Do you know how to take up trousers?
One day I came up an idea that I will take up guitar.
He could take up skateboarding <begin a new activity or hobby>
When people retire, they usually take up a hobby, or a sport of some description, or do some gardening.
Reluctant users slow to take up videoconferncing
Please, you take up my challenge!
He says he's now looking for a woman to take up with.
The CEO would be happy to take up your kind offer.
to take up too much space. the shopping took (up) a lot of time
英語 "という言葉zając się"(take up)集合で発生します。
ang 27.09.22