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Idiom
To know something inside-out.
To know something completely and thoroughly.
Exact(1)
"I understand that with 18 months' warning there should be sufficient time to find the best solution for the club and for the player, so that Barca keep on winning and so do I. "In January, I said I could see myself playing in other leagues, getting to know something different and looking for different sources of motivation".
Similar(57)
A good college, you've got to know something to get in".
In a nutshell, my philosophy is this... Get to know something before you approach it.
There's really a tremendous advantage to covering a subject constantly, so that you actually get to know something about it.
The best bit of my job is that I get to talk to Americans and I get to know something about their culture.
Interfaith work, at its best, allows people to break through their old prejudices and get to know something of the actual person behind the stereotype.
But with hindsight, it was the best possible training to be a director, which is very much a mongrel art form: you've got to know something about every aspect of the medium.
Finally, get to know something about your boss' life outside work.
You've got to know something about the person you are dealing with before you can trust them".
We are certainly not obliged to get to know something if we do not wish to.
Over time, I got to know something about the children's lives.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com