Example sentences of "up [prep] [noun sg] [noun] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 He added that fell walkers and ramblers may be teaming up for weekend excursions into the great outdoors .
2 I paid surreptitious trips to our old homes in Ada Street and West Avenue , where the fences my father had put up for Granny Kirkup before the war — in 1934 , I believe — were still standing round the long garden of ‘ Mundesley ’ , named after my grandmother 's birthplace .
3 SELECTING jurors is ‘ a lottery within a lottery ’ and can be unfair to the administration of justice , an Old Bailey judge said yesterday , as he fined a man £100 for failing to turn up for jury service on the second day of a trial because it was ‘ not his scene ’ .
4 Middlesbrough Council is chasing businesses in the town who missed the deadline to sign up for food safety under the Food Premises Registration Regulations .
5 The system takes in small amounts of fresh water from time to time , and these introduce a fresh supply of mineral salts , which build up as scale deposits in the boiler and within the pipework .
6 One technique involves the picking up of spread cells from the surface of a saline or sucrose solution onto a slide and is generally used for spermatocyte spreading when an abundance of cells is available in suspension .
7 A visit should also include the Chapel of the Pietà , occasionally known as the chapel of San Satiro , where there is a superb Deposition made up of terracotta figures by the artist Agostino De Fondutis .
8 It 's believed warm weather has led to a build up of botulism bacteria in the canal .
9 There are also fears about the build up of methane gas at the site , which is yards away from a railway bank made of thousands of tonnes of coal waste .
10 It needs only a couple of well-publicized mercy flights to the United States and appropriate patriotic breast-beating to ensure that liver transplant units spring up like desert flowers after the rain .
11 IN HIS DREAM , Cameron Nielson Jr saw life as a motion picture , unspooling steadily in the white-hot gaze of the bulb , the past piling up like celluloid string on the projection booth floor .
12 Walking back through the jungle I thankfully did n't come across any trap-door spiders but as dusk fell I was entranced by a cluster of trees which were suddenly lit up like Christmas trees by the thousands of glow-worms out for a night of passion .
13 A fish house tends to warm up with heat loss from the tanks — mine is generally about 60°F — and can be rather humid .
14 Held , that , since in Part III of the Insolvency Act 1986 there was no definition of ‘ company ’ in relation to administrative receivers , by virtue of section 251 of that Act the definition in section 735 of the Companies Act 1985 applied and , therefore , unless the contrary intention appeared , ‘ company ’ was to be defined as a company registered under the Companies Acts ; but that a contrary intention was to be deduced from the proper construction of the provisions relating to administrative receivers generally and the Act of 1986 as a whole , whereby it appeared that Parliament intended that ‘ company , ’ in the context of section 29(2) ( a ) , should not be confined to the prima facie meaning of companies registered under the Companies Acts but should embrace unregistered companies liable to be wound up under Part V of the Act of 1986 ; and that , accordingly , the applicants were administrative receivers within the meaning of section 29(2) ( post , pp. 243F–G , 244A–C , D–G , 245F — 246A ) .
15 In this judgment I shall use the expression ‘ unregistered company ’ to mean any company which is liable to be wound up under Part V of the Act of 1986 .
16 The relevant question is therefore : is there any indication in the subject matter and statutory purpose of the provisions concerning administrative receivers generally , or in the Act of 1986 considered as a whole , from which it appears that Parliament intended that the word ‘ company ’ in the context of section 29(2) ( a ) of that Act should not be confined to its prima facie meaning of a company formed and registered under the Companies Acts , but should also embrace unregistered companies liable to be wound up under Part V of the Act of 1986 ?
17 The position would , of course , have been plainer if Parliament had provided an expanded express definition of ‘ company ’ for the purposes of the group of sections which relate to administrative receivers , such as was done in the case of section 388(4) of the Act of 1986 , and was also done , for example , in section 22(2) ( b ) of the Company Directors Disqualification Act 1986 , where company is defined as including ‘ any company which may be wound up under Part V of the Insolvency Act . ’
18 The definition of ‘ company ’ in section 22(2) ( b ) of that Act includes any company which may be wound up under Part V of the Insolvency Act .
19 Lately he had been troubled by rheumatism brought on by the damp in the house , and his doctor had set him up in sleeping quarters on the ground floor with independent heating arrangements .
20 ‘ I patched him up in record time by the roadside .
21 Frustrated football fans , caught up in traffic delays on the M1 yesterday afternoon , left their coaches at the Edgware junction and started to walk to Wembley along the hard shoulder .
22 The vast constructions built up on slave labour by the Ancient Egyptians or Romans were therefore not possible in Romanesque Europe .
23 ‘ Some of the results will be up on monitor screens for the audience to see — others will be broadcast . ’
24 You 'll get the most up to date equipment on the market today .
25 The chapters which follow provide an up to date discussion of the relevant literature and research into each aspect as they impinge upon social workers , nurses , and remedial therapists .
26 Table 4.2 According to the latest available information from the UKCC , it is proposed that on completion of a suitable programme , the following outcomes , which are based on up to date knowledge of the practice of nursing or health visiting , should be achieved by the nurse or health visitor in order to practise safely after a break in service :
27 Up to date copies of the THREE STOKES GUIDE together with instructions for its use have been provided to all Personal Depts. — all staff involved in Pleasurecraft claims should be fully instructed in the use of this Guide .
28 The Climbers Club guidebook setup has been undergoing changes that should result in a much smoother flow of up to date guides without the huge time-lags that have recently featured between one volume selling out and the next one being published .
29 but can I , can I just say can can we have an up to date figure on the environmental impact analyse
30 Times have changed and the hospital can longer offer up to date facilities for the elderly .
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