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Teal lime Posted 9 years ago
Grammar

Get someone into something, get someone into doing something

Do the expressions "to get someone into something" and "to get someone into doing something" make sense in English?

If so, when do you use them?

Would you please give me a couple of examples?

Thank you

  

Top answer

get him into trouble. get him into the water. get him into bed.

  • get him into trouble.
  • get him into the water.
  • get him into bed.
  • get him into the hospital.
  • get him into the country.
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1 Answers
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get him into trouble.
get him into the water.
get him into bed.
get him into the hospital.
get him into the country.

get him into dancing the tango.
get him into doing the dirty work.
get him into learning origami.
get him into doing the crossword puzzle.
get him into eating sushi

CJ

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