Example sentences of "[to-vb] up at [art] [noun sg] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 And so we 're able to , to , once we 've found which birds er have arrived , picked a nest and er have laid eggs , we put a careful watch on them and then we 're able to tot up at the end of the breeding season , how many young have actually fledged .
2 Finally the tram got underway and as it started to pull up at the end of the track by the foot of Duke Street Hill Carrie was already out of her seat and waiting on the platform at the rear of the vehicle , with Fred at her side gripping her arm for fear that she would fall off before it actually stopped .
3 The narrowness of Foxton was at least one of the arguments to come up at the end of the century in favour of the inclined plane .
4 Yet despite one way traffic at times , Newcastle will have to tighten up at the heart of a defence that looked vulnerable .
5 Muslim ones tend to shrivel up at the thought of their women going out to work .
6 ‘ Any more than it 's possible for me to work up at the college with all those strapping lads running round in jockey shorts and have no reaction whatsoever . ’
7 And the West peal comes appeal and the West 's heard becomes a heard and the one sort of difference that 's still there and it may take quite while to go is that the East Mainland when they 're saying a sentence they tend to go up at the end of the sentence the voice rises .
8 She had n't got this far nor worked this hard just to give up at the thought of some sort of opposition .
9 A GRIEVING family has hit out at witnesses who failed to turn up at the trial of a man accused of the attempted murder of their son .
10 She had expected Fernando to turn up at the airport with his arms full of red roses and promises .
11 The singer failed to turn up at the gig at London 's Finsbury Park after he faced a barrage of missiles thrown by fans during Saturday 's performance .
12 Unix System Labs and Open Software Foundation presidents Roel Pieper and David Tory are supposed to turn up at the roll-out in New York with signed technology exchange agreements in their hands .
13 You did n't have to get up at the crack of dawn to work out yardages .
14 If you take advantage of our superb offer , you wo n't have to get up at the crack of dawn and drag your clubs in and out of the car boot .
15 ‘ You know that the twins always seem to get up at the crack of dawn .
16 But she had made huge progress , Lisa congratulated herself as she got ready to pack up at the end of another exhausting day .
17 ‘ I 'll bet she 'd like him to end up at the foot of the cliff , ’ said a voice .
18 Places dedicated to film presentation , the penny gaffes , did start to spring up at the beginning of the new century , but it was only with the emergence of long films around 1910 that cinema acquired any sort of institutional presence in British towns .
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