Example sentences of "[verb] up [prep] a [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 It could be a flash new car , stumped up by a wealthy director who can write off the cost of the car as a demonstration model from his own showroom .
2 Her resentment of Guy Sterne 's involvement with her family was somehow getting mixed up with a physical chemistry , she decided uneasily , and she found the latter far more confusing and unnerving .
3 CIARAN McVeigh from Parkside Snooker Club , Lurgan whitewashed Kieran Erwin 3–0 in the Drumgor Top 64 tournament last night opening up with a 122 break .
4 We had just finished the DI ( daily inspection ) when a very elderly photographer wandered up with a rickety tripod and ancient camera .
5 Not to marry , but just to meet up on a regular basis and do nice things together such as walks , long discussions about books and music , that sort of thing .
6 As she did so , she noticed that the heath adjoining the road rose up to a small hill , on top of which stood an old and dilapidated windmill .
7 So a a a a as you say that the problem is that erm as this process gets under way and er i i s so , I , I think it 's , it 's not just absolute egalitarian in that everybody will get the same , I think there was an assumption that there would be enough for everybody becoming up to a middle peasant status .
8 The cars drew up for a quiet haggle , the girls got in .
9 They were closed , but just beyond them he cut the engine and drew up to a short flight of steps with a small studded door at the top .
10 Finally , worn out by her own thoughts and the strain of the last few hours , she drew up at a small country hotel and took a room there for the night .
11 We drew up in a tiny village called Pontrobert in Powys — a particularly beautiful part of mid-Wales .
12 For all that , it had the feel of a city wakening up after a long sleep and beginning to shake off decades of despair .
13 If the plan goes through , the mine would push further west from the workings acquired when Wheal Jane lined up with a second mine , Mount Wellington , a couple of years ago .
14 She wanted to curl up in a small ball somewhere quiet , dark and safe , and stay there until she felt capable of facing the world again .
15 It is not only the victims of mental or physical abuse who grow up with a faulty self-image .
16 This will differ according to the richness of the environment provided by the home and the wider community , but all children live and grow up in a print-rich world full of writing and people who write .
17 Olympic decathlete Daley Thompson has left the world of track and field and is gearing up for a new career in motor racing .
18 The traditional multilateral institutions , IMF and World Bank , are gearing up for a major contribution .
19 Now the Japanese are gearing up for a third try .
20 Comedienne Marti Caine , star presenter of BBC1 's Joker in the Pack is gearing up for a hair-raising performance as the evil panto Queen in Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs .
21 The sportscar firm is gearing up for a multi-million pound windfall by having replicas of the dream machine on sale in the next few weeks for at least £5,000 apiece .
22 Unlike its predecessors , Warrior is capable of keeping up with a Main Battle Tank across country
23 Sit on a stool and massage one foot at a time by placing it on your thigh , knee bent up at a right angle .
24 Clearly , unless these features are defined with precision , there is a danger of ending up with a tautological explanation : what is recent must also be novel because it is recent .
25 Weary constituency and trade union delegates , queuing for a cup of tea and a sandwich , constantly risk ending up with a signed copy of someone 's memoirs .
26 Instead it goes on growing , ending up as a giant larva more than twice the weight of a normal adult .
27 This nearly always results in drifting further back without much gain of height and ending up in a worse situation than before .
28 When they hit the ground , they may stop abruptly , embedding themselves still glowing , fuming and sizzling slightly in the loose ash ; or they may bounce off , to leap down the steep sides of the cone in a series of great bounds , developing a rapid spin as they do so , and whirring downhill like cannonballs , ending up in a rattling shower of small stones at the bottom .
29 One reason there is so little change in most traditional bureaucratic organizations , I argue , is that they have conditioned out of people the willingness to stand up for a new idea .
30 Even at this stage he was thinking of the day he would bring a murderer into court and his evidence would have to stand up to a hostile defence counsel .
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