Example sentences of "up of [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | The consensus in the markets is that the newly-formed audit committee , made up of board members , is examining more than last years figures . |
2 | The trust consists of about 15 ‘ guardians ’ , made up of management and staff . |
3 | By then employment at Binns Road was 2,000 , made up of management , designers , production workers , and marketing and advertising specialists . |
4 | Operational deposits make up approximately a fifth of bankers ' balances held at the bank , the remainder being made up of non-interest bearing cash deposits that banks are required to keep at the Bank of England to provide it with an income . |
5 | We have watched the drying up of provision of aids and equipment . |
6 | For young women the disease sanctions were even stronger and tended to be linked with childbearing threats , with the possibility opened up of cancer , insanity and TB , or at the least frigidity or nymphomania . |
7 | Did it for his wife actually because she was fed up of knitting stockings . |
8 | Her wig is made up of bottle tops , left over from ordinary twentieth-century life , trodden into the dirt underfoot , pressed on to noticeboards . |
9 | The T U C Congress is made up of bone fide delegates from national trade unions . |
10 | Equally importantly there are very real , sometimes crippling limitations of external resources , from not enough books and pencils to go round , through a drying up of goodwill between colleagues , to a general reduction in financial and material support for schools as a whole . |
11 | An outstanding example of this type of narrative is Vargas Llosa 's Conversation in the Cathedral , which pivots around a four-hour conversation between two characters , the whole novel being made up of dialogue and narrative units generated in waves by the central conversation , as the two men 's review of their past lives sparks off inner thoughts and recollections and conjures up other conversations and dramatized episodes . |
12 | Some of these are already apparent following Britain 's entry into the ERM : the stoking up of inflation in the mid-1980s and the creation in the 1990s of a million or so extra unemployed , together with thousands of bankruptcies , can properly be ascribed in the main to priority having been given to a managed exchange rate . |
13 | All the build up of delight shrivelled and stripped Jay to lonely self-scourging . |
14 | 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 . |
15 | Flexibility is obtained when the chains are made up of bond sequences which are able to rotate easily , and polymers containing , , or links will have correspondingly low values of T g . |
16 | For statistical reasons , they used data from England and Wales only , leaving the separate judicial systems of Northern Ireland and Scotland , while acknowledging the experimental use of control techniques in Northern Ireland , and the softening up of public opinion prior to their introduction to the mainland . |
17 | Each kieve has a false bottom made up of interlocking slotted plates which prevent the mash being sucked away when the sweet worts are run off . |
18 | I went and sat in a field and experienced that great bubbling up of love for the Father and for Jesus which I expressed alternately in English and in this new language which I did not understand but which I knew was to be addressed to God and which built me up as I used it . |
19 | FOLLOW UP OF REMISSION |
20 | He had picked her up of intent , had followed her into this inn for some purpose of his own . |
21 | You see that 's the trouble you see every individual is different in the make up of life they are , so some 'd get pregnant by oh you might as well say looking at one another and another one they might perhaps go years and not get pregnant . |
22 | ‘ At a certain point one is compelled to develop a conception of insight , or pure thinking , which is not recognisably ‘ moral ’ , something which simulates , or is , the rising up of man into the divine , as if one were being driven into the godhead . ’ |
23 | Served up of course in that certain unique Club 18–30 Summer Style . |
24 | Using a bar code reader and a suitable computer system greatly speeds things up of course , and the books of codes are presumably only needed for reference and checking purposes . |
25 | Erm It all gets mixed up of course because there 's , there 's there 's erm erm Russia which is seen as a power , you know the reactionary power . |
26 | Anyway back to main point , so up to retirement quite straightforward , no problem at all and this is why he could have gone on for donkey years without a return of income , his salary goes up of course , it 's picked up in the tax tables , his personal allowances do n't change so they could swan along there for so many years without even looking at his affairs , but then see what happens in the very next tax year , when he has n't had a return and may not get a return for a couple of years . |
27 | Th there was sort of decorations on the saddles and things like that you know , and er , er , they had this firm and it was up of course , well , and it , to tell how far it was I had to be in by seven o'clock and I used to run it all the way . |
28 | Clients are realising the benefits that we can offer and this has been reflected in the substantial growth that we have seen recently in sales performance , backed up of course by a dedicated service structure to ensure that customers stay with us . |
29 | not wired up of course . |
30 | They do n't always dress up of course but I soon got in the habit by trying on a Tommy Cooper-styled fez . |