Work from Home on your PC. No selling, calling, or inventory to buy. Make $20 to $150 per hour or more. We offer 3 ways to earn income: 1) Do ad offers. 2) Write about ad offers. 3) Refer others to us. We are BBB Online approved and PayPal verified.
to receive or come to have possession, use, or enjoyment of: to get a birthday present; to get a pension.
2.
to cause to be in one's possession or succeed in having available for one's use or enjoyment; obtain; acquire: to get a good price after bargaining; to get oil by drilling; to get information.
3.
to go after, take hold of, and bring (something) for one's own or for another's purposes; fetch: Would you get the milk from the refrigerator for me?
4.
to cause or cause to become, to do, to move, etc., as specified; effect: to get one's hair cut; to get a person drunk; to get a fire to burn; to get a dog out of a room.
5.
to communicate or establish communication with over a distance; reach: You
1056
can always get me by telephone.
6.
to hear or hear clearly: I didn't get your last name.
7.
to acquire a mental grasp or command of; learn: to get a lesson.
8.
to capture; seize: Get him before he escapes!
9.
to receive as a punishment or sentence: to get a spanking; to get 20 years in jail.
10.
to prevail on; influence or persuade: We'll get him to go with us.
11.
to prepare; make ready: to get dinner.
12.
(esp. of animals) to beget.
13.
Informal. to affect emotionally: Her pleas got me.
14.
to hit, strike, or wound: The bullet got him in the leg.
15.
Informal. to kill.
16.
Informal. to take vengeance on: I'll get you yet!
17.
to catch or be afflicted with; come down with or suffer from: He got malaria while living in the tropics. She gets butterflies before every performance.
18.
Informal. to puzzle; irritate; annoy: Their silly remarks get me.
19.
Informal. to understand; comprehend: I don't get the joke. This report may be crystal-clear to a scientist, but I don't get it.
–verb (used without object)
20.
to come to a specified place; arrive; reach: to get home late.
21.
to succeed, become enabled, or be permitted: You get to meet a lot of interesting people.
22.
to become or to cause oneself to become as specified; reach a certain condition: to get angry; to get sick.
23.
(used as an auxiliary verb fol. by a past participle to form the passive): to get married; to get elected; to get hit by a car.
24.
to succeed in coming, going, arriving at, visiting, etc. (usually fol. by away, in, into, out, etc.): I don't get into town very often.
25.
to bear, endure, or survive (usually fol. by through or over): Can he get through another bad winter?
26.
to earn money; gain.
27.
Informal. to leave promptly; scram: He told us to get.
<
215
/table>
28.
to start or enter upon the action of (fol. by a present participle expressing action): to get moving; Get rolling.
–noun
29.
an offspring or the total of the offspring, esp. of a male animal: the get of a stallion.
30.<
bc2
/td>
a return of a ball, as in tennis, that would normally have resulted in a point for the opponent.
31.
BritishSlang.
a.
something earned, as salary, profits, etc.: What's your week's get?
b.
a child born out of wedlock.
—Verb phrases
32.
get about,
a.
to move about; be active: He gets about with difficulty since his illness.
b.
to become known; spread: It was supposed to be a secret, but somehow it got about.
c.
to be socially active: She's been getting about much more since her family moved to the city.
Also, get around.
33.
get across,
a.
to make or become understandable; communicate: to get a lesson across to students.
b.
to be convincing about; impress upon others: The fire chief got across forcefully the fact that turning in a false alarm is a serious offense.
34.
get ahead, to be successful, as in business or society: She got ahead by sheer determination.
35.
get ahead of,
a.
to move forward of, as in traveling: The taxi got ahead of her after the light changed.
b.
to surpass; outdo: He refused to let anyone get ahead of him in business.
to begin; act: They wanted to get going on the construction of the house.
b.
to increase one's speed; make haste: If we don't get going, we'll never arrive in time.
53.
get it, Informal.
a.
to be punished or reprimanded: You'll get it for breaking that vase!
d52
b.
to understand or grasp something: This is just between us, get it?
54.
get it off, Slang:Vulgar. to experience orgasm.
55.
get it on,
a.
Informal. to work or perform with satisfying harmony or energy or develop a strong rapport, as in music: a rock group really getting it on with the audience.
b.
Slang:Vulgar. to have sexual intercourse.
56.
get it up, Slang:Vulgar, to achieve an erection of the penis.
57.
get off on, Slang. to become enthusiastic about or excited by: After years of indifference, she's getting off on baseball.
a vast computer network linking smaller computer networks worldwide (usually prec. by the). The Internet includes commercial, educational, governmental, and other networks, all of which use the same set of communications protocols.
Computers and Information Systems Privacy was a major concern of those monitoring e-commerce practices. DoubleClick Inc., which provided advertising services to Internet marketers and Web sites, paid settlements in two ...
Media and Publishing The dominant news in American radio was the potentially debilitating ailments suffered by two of the medium's biggest stars. Paul Harvey (see Biographies), fresh off a 10-year contract to continue ...
poker The popularity of poker at the turn of the 21st century intrinsically ties to a multiplicity of tournaments and to widespread televising of these events. One tournament stands above all others in ...
Media and Publishing In a sign that India was finally coming to grips with the issue of piracy, in July Pearson Education successfully pursued Hyderabad publishers through the courts for copyright infringement, and the ...
sports The oldest form of betting is probably one in which gamblers bet winner take all on the outcome of a contest. Today one of the most common forms of sports gambling is odds betting, in which a casino ...
Media and Publishing A severe advertising recession that forewarned a global economic downturn overtook newspapers in 2001, even as the September 11 attacks in the United States produced some of the most dramatic news ...
Calendar of 2001 Seven foreign oil workers-four Americans, an Argentine, a Chilean, and a New Zealander-who had been kidnapped in October 2000 in Ecuador are freed after a ransom of some $13 million is paid.
Publishing In Britain 1994 was marked by an extraordinary bout of price cutting among the country's quality broadsheet newspapers, leading to the fiercest battle for readers since the 1930s. It embroiled the ...
Performing Arts Any cultural tradition that endures and flourishes for a thousand years must move at a considered pace. Thus it was that a mere five years late, in 2005 classical music entered the 21st century. The ...
The U.S. Election of 2004 When a U.S. president seeks reelection, the outcome is usually decisive. A consensus emerges on whether the incumbent deserves to be kept on, and the sitting president is either dismissed or, more ...
MyContentBuilder - Found Nov. 19, 2008 ... a hefty 'Internet income' via Paid surveys. Like I said, the ways to make money online via Paid ... most of the company wages get debited at ...
Cape Business News - Found Nov. 18, 2008 We are also always on the lookout for and developing more and new ways for you to get paid on the internet . . so its onward and upward from...
Los Angeles Chronicle - Found Nov. 12, 2008 ... and get paid a good amount of money every time. Really, the possibilities are endless when you want to Earn Extra Money on the Internet with...
The Superficial - Because You're Ugly - Found Nov. 11, 2008 Apparently, Adrienne paid a $1,000 ransom to get the laptop back, but never pursued who stole it, according to NY Daily News : "It's not a...
Article Dashboard.com - Found Nov. 8, 2008 Get a marketable email address. You Gotta Get a Website and/or Webhost Many internet marketers ... value chain from free to higher paid products
ArticleXplosion.com - Found Nov. 16, 2008 ... paid by affiliate networks for sending Internet ... and wire transfers tend to be the slowest and most expensive way to get paid - for both the
UPublish.info - Found Nov. 10, 2008 ... paid by affiliate networks for sending Internet ... and wire transfers tend to be the slowest and most expensive way to get paid - for both the
Australian PC World - Found Oct. 7, 2008 By way of comparison, Virgin Broadband - which also offers pre-paid internet - offers 1GB for ... forced to pay online in order to get back 15% of
ITworld.com - Found 4 hours ago Internet access: paid per month. Music download services: paid per month. ... Move in together, the subscription model, rather than get married.