get+out+of+bed
51ˌget sb ˈup — phrasal verb to wake someone and tell them to get out of bed Will you get me up at six tomorrow?[/ex] …
52bed·pan — /ˈbɛdˌpæn/ noun, pl pans [count] : a shallow pan used as a toilet by a person who is too ill to get out of bed …
53get up — he seldom gets up before noon Syn: get out of bed, rise, stir, rouse oneself; informal surface; formal arise …
54get up — Syn: get out of bed, rise, stir, rouse oneself; informal surface …
55ˌget ˈup — phrasal verb to get out of bed after sleeping He never gets up before nine.[/ex] …
56bed on the wrong side, get out of — Be irritable …
57Out of the sack — (get up) from bed …
58get — /get/ verb past tense got, past participle got especially BrE gotten especially AmE present participle getting RECEIVE/OBTAIN 1 RECEIVE (transitive not in passive) to be given or receive something: Sharon always seems to get loads of mail. | Why… …
59Get — (g[e^]t), v. i. 1. To make acquisition; to gain; to profit; to receive accessions; to be increased. [1913 Webster] We mourn, France smiles; we lose, they daily get. Shak. [1913 Webster] 2. To arrive at, or bring one s self into, a state,… …
60get — 1. range of use. Get is one of the most frequently used and most productive words in English. Often it has virtually no meaning in itself and draws its meaning almost entirely from its context, especially in idiomatic uses such as get to bed, get …