Example sentences of "[pers pn] [verb] up the [noun] to " in BNC.
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1 | I stumble up the aisle to the immense ponderous tones of a god extolling the virtues of a restaurant in Moscow Road , Bayswater , and pass through some dingy curtains into the foyer . |
2 | ABBERLEY : I gave up the title to you . |
3 | Cos I picked up the Chester to Wrexham one instead of the Snowdonia one . |
4 | Jane found it cold , but her visitors found it freezing , so she turned up the thermostat to seventy . |
5 | If you set up the water to the right parameters , there is no reason why you should no be able to keep this species successfully . |
6 | She rolled up the sleeve to her elbow , the fingers of her right hand brushing her left forearm as she did so . |
7 | She pointed up the beach to a man and a woman barely visible under a big beach umbrella . |
8 | She stole up the staircase to his room , where she had not been since she was one of his students . |
9 | We went up the hotel to meals |
10 | Thus as the need for basic sustenance is met we move up the ladder to the next step , which is the satisfaction of the need for safety . |
11 | From Sicily they sailed up the coastline to Venice together . |
12 | Their actual effect was pretty disastrous ; they screwed up the whole culture , and they opened up the island to being overrun by pineapple and sugar plantations . |
13 | They walked up the beach to where they had left their towels . |
14 | They went up the run to the mouth of the hole and paused together . |
15 | Sombre , though with a pacy , filmic sequencing he whipped up the orchestra to a marvellously stylish finale . |
16 | This not only disturbed the Junker sense of social stability , but played havoc with their income since it opened up the estates to the market force of unfettered labour : the Junkers were obliged to acknowledge a world that they had been desperately trying to shut out . |
17 | He opened up the Museum to scholars and architectural historians by writing many articles on Soane and his collections for the architectural press in the 1920s and also embarked on a series of publications about Soane : The Works of Sir John Soane ( 1924 ) , an edition of Soane 's Royal Academy Lectures on Architecture ( 1929 ) and The Portrait of Sir John Soane ( 1927 ) , as well as a number of pamphlets . |
18 | And then , as they mumbled and made half-hearted climbing-down gestures that he knew would probably stop as soon as he was out of sight , he opened up the door to the club and let himself in . |
19 | Turning up the collar of his Burberry against the chill morning air , he climbed up the slope to the rim of the hollow and stood looking down at the car . |
20 | He clambered up the bank to the top where the trees ended . |
21 | DETECTIVES are hunting the killer of a friendly bus driver gunned down as he walked up the driveway to his North-East home . |
22 | He goes in , he trips the toggle , the toggle jiggers the trapeze , the trapeze lets go the springy pole , it whips back , it pulls up the door to the basket … the big fish is the prisoner now . |
23 | He held up the glass to her . |
24 | A few minutes after restarting he picked up the autobahn to Salzburg . |