DictionaryForumContacts

   English
Terms for subject British usage, not spelling containing get on | all forms | exact matches only | in specified order only
EnglishRussian
get on brilliantlyнаходиться в прекрасных отношениях (The two them started chatting in a language Lorna did not understand, staying up to watch TV after she had gone to bed and regularly went to gym with each other. They both said that although they were 'getting on brilliantly' at this time, 'it was no more than that' and 'innocent'. But they ended up 'finding excuses to touch and brush against each other' and things got tense in the house. dailymail.co.uk ART Vancouver)
get on someone's wickдействовать на нервы (Anglophile)
tells someone to get skates onподгонять (My boyfriend always tells me to get skates on because I tend to dress up for some party for hours and we are late all the time 4uzhoj)