Example sentences of "[vb -s] up [prep] a [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Soon an object reaches meteorite size , and then finishes up as a planet-sized object , all within a few thousand years .
2 And Inderjit Singh , of the Council of Sikh Gurdwaras , said : ‘ Handsworth always finishes up as a chaotic dump and the traders are scared .
3 That adds up to a good campaign in Labour 's view : no gaffes , lots of pictures , and a positive message delivered in controlled surroundings .
4 She thinks you suspect her and it seems to me that everything adds up to a good cause for her condition . ’
5 There 's plenty of detail in the smaller pictures of the humans , too , and the book as a whole adds up to a great experience for a child — almost as good as a day out at the zoo ! ( 2–5 )
6 That adds up to a great confrontation in today 's championship clash with title-holders Essex , with England captain Graham Gooch making an early return to Old Trafford where he hit one of the great Test centuries on Monday .
7 Clearly it all adds up to a great season ahead for the fans , who fought to keep speedway in Swindon .
8 This adds up to a total cost of just under £20 bn , or about £6,600 per unemployed person .
9 It all adds up to a better deal , for your managers , your training budget and for effective corporate management development .
10 Their visibility or otherwise , the ways in which they are coded , policed , censored , constructed , praised or punished , the ways in which and levels at which they are represented as engaging with the viewer , and the contexts in which women 's bodies are placed in images and how images of women 's bodies are then distributed and consumed — all this adds up to a subtle politics of the representation of women 's bodies .
11 Our friendly bar with its extensive range of beers , real ales and cocktails , combined with the latest music , dancing and entertainment , adds up to a memorable evening in a convivial atmosphere .
12 All of this adds up to a personal credo that we are not just specialized apes but a unique and peculiar species of our own .
13 Cos each group adds up to a dotted quaver .
14 This seldom adds up to a coherent investment plan , but may be more simply described as a way of keeping things going until better days arrive .
15 This all adds up to a bleak picture for corporate UK .
16 Which all in all adds up to a Mediterranean type of diet — with porridge !
17 We 've been frozen out there , and that order was worth a couple of million sterling , and that adds up to a hefty pile of wage packets .
18 Maintaining safety in the home is an expensive business and , for families with children , the purchase of recommended safety equipment — such as car safety seats , stair gates , a playpen and a cooker guard — adds up to a considerable sum .
19 This little difference adds up to a large saving .
20 The Council was exempted from meeting on the sixty or so annual festival days , but not on the monthly ones ; this adds up to a large number of meetings ( c.300 ) held per year .
21 ‘ I think it all adds up to an impressive document . ’
22 It all adds up to an awesome task , but , come what may , the ‘ Buns ’ are determined to enjoy themselves and , in the words of secretary Allen Morris , ‘ savour the moment . ’
23 That may be half of what Darren paid for it , but in absolute terms it 's incredibly low depreciation over 40,000 and adds up to an excellent value motoring package .
24 It all adds up to an exotic holiday of pure Turkish Delight .
25 Some of the tracks have been available already — if you bought the limited edition live versions of the singles ‘ Stop ’ and ‘ Shivering Sand ’ — but ‘ IT ’ still holds up as a worthwhile representation of the Megas ' consistent live set ; in full and in earnest .
26 Ms or Mr Trim wakes up for an early morning drink , has tea or coffee with either no milk or skimmed milk and definitely no sugar .
27 She says she also sleeps better and wakes up with a clearer head which is not the sort of image she portrayed a couple of years ago when all the pressures she was facing caused her to hit the bottle again .
28 A man wakes up in a beautiful room in a strange house .
29 This , the Lower Limestone of 19th century surveyors , passes up into a thick sequence of sandstones and shales with thin limestones referred to as the Middle Limestone or ‘ Calp ’ .
30 M56 is not at all prominent , but shows up as a faint patch of light .
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