get onto
See also: get on to
English edit
Verb edit
get onto (third-person singular simple present gets onto, present participle getting onto, simple past got onto, past participle (UK) got onto or (US, Australia) gotten onto)
- To contact a person or organisation about a particular matter.
- You should get onto the manufacturers and complain.
- To connect, especially to the Internet or a network.
- With my new computer, I can get onto the Internet faster.
- (transitive) To scold someone.
- My father got onto me for taking the car without asking.
- (ditransitive, informal) To introduce someone to something.
- My mum got me onto this new diet and I've lost 5 kilos in the past two weeks.
- (informal) To take a look at someone or something.
- Hey, get onto the dog and cat playing together.
- 1918, Norman Lindsay, The Magic Pudding, page 90:
- “Get onto the bloke with the face fringe.”
- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see get, onto.
- The child will get onto the merry-go-round.
Usage notes edit
The usage "to introduce someone to something" always requires an object both before and after onto. The other meanings only require an object after onto.
Synonyms edit
Translations edit
move onto an object
contact a person or organisation
connect to the Internet or a network
scold someone
introduce someone to something
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