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

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1 So the shape of those things can be very important and , if we 're going to look at those , y'know look at communication within an organisational structure we can think about communication that goes up from the bottom of the organisational structure to the top , we can look at communication that goes down , from the top of the organisation downwards and we can look at communication that goes across , okay ?
2 The strength of colour that builds up through the summer and autumn gradually disappears and the winter garden is usually left with weak and delicate shades .
3 The boathook is planted deep in its belly , a grotesque fifth limb that rears up into the air as it turns over .
4 I think the bit that stands up above the horizon is fine , I mean I think that gives you a good idea of what it would have been like had you been able to get the whole , or not perhaps the whole of it , but a lot more of the post up above the horizon simply by getting down lower .
5 Labour must , once again , be the party that stands up for the individual against the vested interests that hold him or her back …
6 He went out and took the path that leads up over the ridge to the ferry .
7 I remember , you know er Michelle that works up in the Body Shop ?
8 ‘ Specially if they manage to fire the place an ’ have a secret bolthole that comes up outside the line of the fence . ’
9 What I 'm against is the inference that we do n't put any other matters erm that comes up on the subject if it arose prior to the to June .
10 They thereby avoid commitment to any current fad that comes up on the whirligig of fashion .
11 No , but I 've read erm that one about that thing that comes up out the ground it was so creepy , it was really creepy .
12 It is approached along a forty-mile-long fiord and the approach instructions are that the pilot should turn left at the entrance by the sunken freighter that sticks up in the fiord , or else run out of airspace and crash into the sheer mountains that rise to seven thousand feet at the end of it .
13 Shrugging the receiver between cheek and shoulder places an enormous strain on the sternocleido-mastoid muscles , the prominent bulges on each side of your neck , and the splenius capitis , the muscle that runs up to the base of your skull and stops you wearing your head at a jaunty angle .
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