Example sentences of "[adv] [adv] up in the [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | However , things are apparently still up in the air and OEMs are expected to gang up on the doorstep to get their two cents in . |
2 | My Queen , there is a gale and a high tide coming together , and the general view is that the women and children might be better off up in the hill-houses . ’ |
3 | Tucked away high up in the Ratikon Alps , Brand is a beautiful little village in the traditional Austrian style . |
4 | My own plans are still totally up in the air , except that I am sure to resume my work when the new season gets underway — and then I am just going to make music wherever I am offered the best conditions for it . |
5 | As we had managed to walk so far the previous day , we were fairly high up in the mountains , and knew that the fog could take as long as 48 hours to clear . |
6 | A small window , rather high up in the wall facing the door , was glazed in frosted glass with a single pane above of the stained kind in a dark purplish-red . |
7 | The example sketched out above concerns those relatively high up in the hierarchy , but it can be extended to cover other employees of the body-maker . |
8 | But the odd rumour has gone round that Six has been operating someone big , someone quite high up in the KGB . |
9 | of course until December so at least still very much up in the air , but certainly the estimates of the current year are produced of highly |
10 | Moreover , for foraging humans , tropical rain forests are too food-poor , although such foods are available to other primates , because they are too far up in the canopy , deep in the ground or the human gut is not capable of digesting them . |
11 | By Lancaster Road standards , the Ryans had gone too far up in the world , making them aliens . |