Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
It was very easy to get on with him then.
An experience like that might make her a lot easier to get on with.
But, like the rest of us Beatles girls, she was friendly, too, and easy to get on with.
You are so easy to get on with that I am sorry to see you go.
George was a friendly person who was easy to get on with.
I'm really easy to get on with and I'm a hard worker.
"I suppose I was not always easy to get on with," he says.
Poirot said, "Did you find your mistress easy to get on with?"
Italians are easier to get on with, they think.
Jane found Jean no less easy to get on with than she had d6ne in London.
Like everyone connected with hospitals he found that male patients were more easy to get on with than female.
George Bush was "easy to get on with" but became exasperated by her habit of dominating the conversation.
'He's a deceptively quiet little man, very easy to get on with,' was the reply to his question.
Men thus instructed often found it easier to get on with it than to try and explain the danger all over again.
They were nice, or all right, kind or likeable or easy to get on with.
Lonely people aren't so easy to get on with as others - but she is great fun now, as you will soon find out.'
It is, and it's a lot easier to get on with than the old gearchange model of my Iberian romance.
The situation was further unusual in that Katharine was not a woman that other women found easy to get on with.
She finds it easier to get on with guys than girls - she's quite sarcastic and to-the-point."
Easy to get on with? "
Jerome Weidman, novelist Authors are easy to get on with - if you are fond of children.
His ethnarch clients found him a delight; scrupulously considerate of their rank, always pleasant and easy to get on with.
But things reached their lowest ebb when an officer, who had seemed to be amongst the easiest to get on with, asked me what my religion was.
Overall, the 238's layout is very easy to get on with, and it doesn't take long, even for a first-timer, to get the hang of operating the buttons.
Already by the end of January, van Gogh was writing his brother Theo that he did not always find it easy to get on with Mauve.