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

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1 and we we 've always thought that , you know , to have a beat officer that was going around that could perhaps turn up at any time , would at least be some deterrent in so much that
2 The towns which thus sprung up at some railway centres are examples of the way in which individuality was lost , and lately the housing estate has spread a new uniformity even more widely over the country .
3 She knew something , though not all , of his day 's programme : she 'd rung The Randolph at 10.45 p.m. and learned from the tour leader that her husband had not turned up at any point during the day to fulfil his commitments — and that in itself was quite out of character .
4 It is extremely important that you do not give up at this point and this is where training really begins .
5 Unfortunately many clinicians use this approach in an incorrect manner and do not follow up at regular intervals .
6 Among his worst crimes are not being married , not turning up at milking times and stealing food . ’
7 Since you are not connecting up at this stage , the rising main can be installed at a leisurely pace .
8 But they were soon rounded up at nearby Maidenhead railway station .
9 One may well ask why , with such a generous offer , the chief executives of our generating companies are not queuing up at British Coal 's door .
10 She and her husband Elfed James , a miner , after renting a couple of rooms , soon ended up at 73 Caradoc Street , the top end , the scullery butting against a mountain leaking coal juice known as ‘ the Side ’ .
11 Even when the weather is too bad for astronomical observing , Alcock still wakes up at two-hourly intervals during the night to make meteorological observations .
12 I could quite reasonably give up at this point , I think .
13 The story is now taken up at second hand .
14 In the early part of the decade the term " pluralism " regularly cropped up at newer institutions such as the University of East Anglia , and , as was noted by a TLS correspondent , this term was " invariably meant to signal virtue " .
15 She remained well clinically to follow up at one year after onset of her colitic symptoms .
16 But there are few women and even fewer men who do n't slip up at some point in their lives , in thought if not in deed .
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