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get: basic structures and meanings

Get is one of the commonest words in English, and is used in many different ways. It is sometimes avoided in a very formal style, but it is correct and natural in most kinds of speech and writing. The meaning of get depends on what kind of word comes after it. With a direct object, the basic meaning is ‘obtain’, ‘come to have’; with other kinds of word, the basic meaning is ‘become’, ‘come to be’.

get + noun/pronoun: I got an email

With a direct object (noun or pronoun), get usually means ‘receive’, ‘fetch’, ‘obtain’, ‘catch’ or something similar. The exact meaning depends on the object.

  • I got an email from Lucy this morning.
  • Can you come and get me from the station when I arrive?
  • If I listen to loud music I get a headache.
  • If you get a number 6 bus, it stops right outside our house.

Get can be used with two objects (see here).

  • Let me get you a drink.

Other meanings are sometimes possible.

  • I didn’t get the joke. (= understand)
  • I’ll get you for this, you bastard. (= punish, make suffer)

Get + noun is not normally used to mean ‘become’. To express this meaning, we can use get to be + noun (see here) below).

  • Wayne’s getting to be a lovely kid. (not Wayne’s getting a lovely kid.)

get + adjective: getting old

Before an adjective, get usually means ‘become’.

  • As you get old, your memory gets worse.
  • My feet are getting cold.

With object + adjective, the meaning is ‘make somebody/something become’.

  • It’s time to get the kids ready for school.
  • I can’t get my hands warm.
  • We must get the house clean before your mother arrives.
note

For go + adjective (go green, go blind, etc), and the differences between get, go, become, turn, etc, (see here).

get + adverb particle or preposition: get out

Before an adverb particle (like up, away, out) or a preposition, get nearly always refers to a movement of some kind. (For the difference between get and go, (see here).)

  • I often get up at five o’clock.
  • I went to see him, but he told me to get out.
  • Would you mind getting off my foot?

In some idioms the meaning is different – e.g. get to a place (= arrive at …); get over something (= recover from); get on with somebody (= have a good relationship with).

With an object, the structure usually means ‘make somebody/something move’.

  • You can’t get him out of bed in the morning.
  • Would you mind getting your papers off my desk?
  • Have you ever tried to get toothpaste back into the tube?
  • The car’s OK – it gets me from A to B.

get + past participle: get washed, dressed, married, etc

Get can be used with a past participle. This structure often has a reflexive meaning, to talk about things that we ‘do to ourselves’. Common expressions are get washed, get dressed, get lost, get drowned, get engaged/married/divorced.

  • You’ve got five minutes to get dressed.
  • She’s getting married in June.

get …ing; get + infinitive

Get …ing is sometimes used informally to mean ‘start …ing’, especially in the expressions get moving, get going.

  • We’d better get moving – it’s late.

With an infinitive, get can mean ‘manage’, ‘have an opportunity’ or ‘be allowed’.

  • We didn’t get to see her – she was too busy.
  • When do I get to meet your new boyfriend?

Get + infinitive can also suggest gradual development.

  • He’s nice when you get to know him.
  • You’ll get to speak English more easily as time goes by.

got and gotten

In British English the past participle of get is got. In American English the past participle is gotten (e.g. You’ve gotten us in a lot of trouble) except in the structure have got (see here).

note

For get as a passive auxiliary (e.g. I get paid on Fridays), (see here).

For causative and other uses of get + object + verb form, (see here).