Example sentences of "[verb] up in the [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 I think he was certainly mixed up in the beastly business of getting into England some of those unhappy Asians who pay through the nose either because they 're desperate to join relatives , or because they think they can find work here .
2 New opportunities are opening up in the near future which you must be calm enough to accept .
3 The nearby fishing village of Porthleven was also badly hit , with a 14ft-deep hole opening up in the back garden of one house .
4 She believes that it is essential that her children grow up in the outside world and not be hidden away in the artificial environment of a royal palace .
5 Who 's been gossiping to you about her running away with the married man when she was fifteen and ending up in the Daily Record ?
6 If a pregnancy is pre-marital , it trebles the relative risk of a couple ending up in the local authority sector rather than the owner-occupied one ( Murphy , 1983 ) .
7 Massive bottle-necks built up in the early spring on the railway network , at Koslov , west of Saratov on the route to Moscow and particularly at Balashov , between Saratov and Tsaritsyn on the west side of the Volga .
8 This came partly from that confidence built up in the wide affection of the large family , partly perhaps from the arrogance of the supreme athlete , mostly , though , from his view that writing and learning were the real thing : acting was fine and dandy but not in the same league .
9 Slowly , an image built up in the mirrored lens .
10 Addresses do n't have to be mentioned , they can easily be looked up in the electoral roll just from a name .
11 I should say I hardly recognised him but scarcely is the word I have picked up in the strange places to which Sebastian and I have journeyed .
12 The immediate remedy is usually to petition for winding up in the public interest , so that a provisional liquidator ( the Official Receiver ) can be appointed , halting the company 's activities .
13 Batty and Sterland play in tonight 's continue their fitness build up in the reserve game against Newcastle , tonight Wed and if they come through will be considered for the Boxing Day game at Blackburn .
14 The fire had been lit in the bedroom , and Senga was sitting curled up in the rocking chair beside the fire quietly reading aloud from the latest issue of the " Girls Own Paper . "
15 The company was wound up in the High Court in February 1989 with tax debts of £35,520 .
16 And that headdress would get caught up in the overhead wires , you silly boy .
17 A theorist might suggest that the conspirators are principally , but not exclusively , Jewish : for example , there might be some Gentile Freemasons caught up in the conspiratorial network .
18 They will be used on humanitarian aid projects by UN High Commission for Refugees teams providing urgently-needed food , blankets and clothing to people caught up in the Balkan conflict .
19 Rather , the idea was to see people as simultaneously subject both to natural and instinctive drives while at the same time caught up in the various forms of culture and social relations which human societies construct in a more conscious way .
20 BRITONS caught up in the horrifying riots tearing the heart out of Los Angeles told yesterday of their terror .
21 Auguste found himself caught up in the general excitement and cursed his heavy waterlogged costume .
22 Everyone seemed to be caught up in the general euphoria except the bride .
23 So there is evidence that the immune system is caught up in the pathological process , but whether it 's truly an auto-immune disease is not so clear .
24 Let us say that , although not trapped in a fight for survival , we are all still caught up in the ordinary competitiveness of business , social gamesmanship , and marriage .
25 Key members accused the MPs of being so caught up in the technical arguments and the prospect of winning one concession from the Government after a barren frustrating decade that they lost sight of the big picture .
26 Prayers for the safety of John Dakyn were probably necessary , as he was caught up in the religious controversies of the age .
27 Like her French contemporaries Elizabeth Vigee-Lebrun or Adelaide Labille-Guiard , Angelica Kauffman was caught up in the contradictory politics of class and gender through the elite patronage without which she could not work .
28 The tempo of living quickens this week and it will be difficult to avoid getting caught up in the frantic pace of events .
29 Finally , by the time that the early group of tutors was appointed , there was a strong concern not to be caught up in the academic drift that , we felt , had tugged Ruskin away from its labour movement roots .
30 He is caught up in the communal excitement , without the prospect of release that performance gives .
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