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Discover Ludwig"get a refill" is a correct and commonly used phrase in written English.
It means to receive more of a drink or item that has run out or run low. Example: "I need to get a refill on my coffee before my next meeting."
Exact(22)
"Get a refill, Dad!" you encourage, like some magnanimous king.
"We'll go in, and on our way home I'll get a refill in the drive-through".
If you're at home when a light goes on, or near a dealership, you can easily get a refill.
It also took three requests, to three different servers, to get a refill of a soft drink.
When it's just your laptop, it's not so bad — get a refill on that coffee!
As a patient, it would be much easier to just e-mail your doctor to get a refill, etc.
Similar(38)
I'd already finished my drink, so I got a refill.
Describing exactly what transpires onstage is difficult, made more so by the fact that by the show's end you may have consumed a fair amount of wine: the three men start off each audience member with a glass and take time out from the proceedings periodically to make sure that anybody who wants one gets a refill.
The patient gets a refill with a mouse click.
Unfortunately, however, the new charging cable doesn't have the handy red/green light as on older models to let you know that the battery is getting a refill when the system's lid is closed.
Later that day he went to the pharmacy and got a refill for his celexa.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com