Example sentences of "[vb -s] [verb] up in [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 ( 3 ) Your house has come up in a random sample of houses in this area and , if you are a full-time housewife , we would like you to tell us about your working day since ( 4 ) we believe that a survey of this subject would be of great value in helping all housewives .
2 These examples may seem to be somewhat removed from the experience of a child who has grown up in an inner-city slum .
3 It has shot up in the recent hot sun , while the grass at the city 's other cemeteries has been burned off .
4 D J Long , the vice-president of marketing who left Applix Inc two weeks ago , has turned up in a similar capacity at Rosh Intelligent Systems Inc , the Aurum-like turnaround former Uniplex chief Jeff Waxman is now heading up .
5 An encouraging aspect of the Rossini celebration is the wider view of his art which has opened up in the past quarter of a century .
6 Just a few miles west in the grounds of Nuneham Conference Park stands another folly which has ended up in an unexpected place .
7 The two-layered cameo of Augustus which has ended up in the British Museum bears tangible evidence of regard , even of awe , in the delicate circlet of gems , including a miniature cameo , affixed to it while in the hands of a medieval owner ( fig. 26 ) .
8 ‘ One gets caught up in the old social whirl .
9 He requires covering up in a strongly-run race to utilise his formidable finishing acceleration to maximum effect , and connections have taken the precaution of declaring a pacemaker in Wharf .
10 It means getting up in the early hours to be ready to board a coach at around 6.30am that will transport them to the South Coast , then bring them back again , arriving home at around midnight .
11 It , it 's really because as somebody gets older the risk gets very , very great , and it needs all the money that 's built up in the early years to sustain the risk , the charges for the risk later on , in the later years .
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