Get on Meaning in English
expression
ˈɡɛt/, /ˈɡɪt/ /ˈɑn/, /ˈɔn
GET-awn or GIT-awn
ɡˈɛt/ /ˈɒn
GET-on
Definición
'Get on' can mean to enter or board a vehicle, to have a good relationship with someone, or to continue or make progress with something.
Uso & Matices
Common in British English; in American English, 'get on' (a bus/train) is less frequent than 'get in' (a car). Used for relationships ('get on with someone') and tasks ('get on with your work'). Informal, conversation-friendly.
Spanish: subirse (a transporte) - llevarse bien - continuarPortuguese (BR): entrar (em transporte) - dar-se bem - continuarPortuguese (PT): entrar (em transporte) - dar-se bem - continuarChinese (Simplified): 上(车等) - 相处得好 - 继续Chinese (Traditional): 上(車等) - 相處得好 - 繼續Hindi: चढ़ना (सवारी में) - साथ निभाना - आगे बढ़नाArabic: يصعد (وسيلة مواصلات) - يتفاهم - يستمرBengali: চড়া - মিল হওয়া - এগিয়ে যাওয়াRussian: садиться (в транспорт) - ладить (с кем-то) - продолжать (что-то)Japanese: 乗る - 仲良くする - 進めるVietnamese: lên (xe, tàu...) - hoà thuận - tiếp tục (việc gì đó)Korean: 타다 - 잘 지내다 - 계속하다Turkish: binmek - iyi geçinmek - devam etmekUrdu: چڑھنا - میل جول رکھنا - جاری رکھناIndonesian: naik (kendaraan) - akur - melanjutkan
Oraciones de Ejemplo
Please get on the bus quickly.
basic
Do you get on with your classmates?
basic
It's time to get on with your homework.
basic
I don't really get on with my neighbors.
natural
Did you get on the right train?
natural
Let's get on with the meeting so we can finish on time.
natural