get back (verb)
51get out — verb 1. move out of or depart from (Freq. 31) leave the room the fugitive has left the country • Syn: ↑exit, ↑go out, ↑leave • Ant: ↑enter ( …
52get on — verb 1. have smooth relations (Freq. 2) My boss and I get along very well • Syn: ↑get along with, ↑get on with, ↑get along • Hypernyms: ↑relate • …
53get over — verb 1. travel across or pass over (Freq. 4) The caravan covered almost 100 miles each day • Syn: ↑traverse, ↑track, ↑cover, ↑cross, ↑pass over, ↑get across, ↑ …
54get behind — verb to lag or linger behind (Freq. 1) But in so many other areas we still are dragging • Syn: ↑drag, ↑trail, ↑hang back, ↑drop behind, ↑drop back • Derivationally related forms: ↑ …
55get ahead — verb obtain advantages, such as points, etc. (Freq. 4) The home team was gaining ground After defeating the Knicks, the Blazers pulled ahead of the Lakers in the battle for the number one playoff berth in the Western Conference • Syn: ↑gain,… …
56back — ► NOUN 1) the rear surface of the human body from the shoulders to the hips. 2) the corresponding upper surface of an animal s body. 3) the side or part of something away from the viewer. 4) the side or part of an object that is not normally seen …
57get well — verb improve in health He got well fast • Syn: ↑get over, ↑bounce back • Ant: ↑get worse • Hypernyms: ↑better, ↑improve, ↑ …
58back up phrasal — verb 1 (transitive back someone/something up) to say that what someone is saying is true: Peggy would back me up if she were here. | The videotape evidence backed up the manager s story. 2 (intransitive, transitive back something up) to make a… …
59get someone's back up — verb To annoy a person either deliberately or inadvertently. That joke really got my bosss back up …
60get one's own back — verb To avenge oneself …