Example sentences of "[vb mod] be [verb] up in the " in BNC.

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1 Certainly English youth should be trained up in the industry , especially in the battery work .
2 Otherwise the plants should be split up in the Spring .
3 Hocevar expressed gratitude for the British action in preventing Croats entering Austria , and stated that it was Yugoslav policy that " Croats should be bottled up in the pass leading to Austria and later disarmed " .
4 The researcher could not draw any generally valid or reliable conclusions from such discussions , but they should provide useful guidelines as to what areas should be followed up in the main enquiry .
5 But he believed that MacDonald had made some soundings in a coalition direction , and in a speech at Hull on 19 July he went out of his way to reject ‘ the idea that a national government such as existed during the war should be set up in the present difficulties ’ .
6 You should advise your LIFESPAN Manager , who should ensure that the charge code directory is accessible to LIFESPAN ( if logical names are being used , these should be set up in the system table ) and has not exceeded its allocated disk quota ( if enabled ) .
7 And he ordered that his daughters should be brought up in the studies beseeming dames .
8 The Gotobeds led a bad life to his strict way of thinking , gambling and travelling and pleasuring themselves , and he said Louisa should be brought up in the fear of the Lord . ’
9 And whichever of our wives takes the workmen their food tomorrow , that one must be walled up in the great gate . "
10 The British contribution to the philosophy of free speech might be summed up in the Duke of Wellington 's phrase , " publish and be damned " .
11 One acoustic theory is immediately exploded : that a whisper on stage could be heard up in the back row ( Greek guides conveniently fail to take the wooden superstructure into account ) .
12 ( The printed sheets were ‘ signed ’ with a letter of the alphabet , so they could be gathered up in the right order — one of each , B , C , D , etc .
13 Extra guests could be put up in the boat itself , which had a permanent skipper and crew , enabling Bernard and Laura to escape at short notice to idyllic , inaccessible Mediterranean islands , Laura still could not swim and often groaned with seasickness .
14 However , the Associated Press news agency reported on Feb. 8 that the package could be held up in the European Parliament , due to opposition from the socialist group because of concerns about Syria 's human rights record .
15 Exactly what extent they could be taken up in the period to ninety six , is not necessarily erm clear because we we do n't know exactly when those are going to be taken up .
16 But the COS had refused to acknowledge the role of economic forces with respect to character , justifying J. A. Hobson 's jibe that their philosophy could be summed up in the phrase ‘ character is the condition of conditions ’ .
17 By half-term , a local parent with a child at Cedars had offered to put Balbinder on the coach in the morning and let him stay at her house until he could be picked up in the evening .
18 Such a thing not having happened for many centuries , the idea , even though the smell of cordite had spread across the Channel and could be picked up in the Charing Cross Road , seemed difficult to envisage .
19 Each man is thrown back on himself alone and there is danger that he may be shut up in the solitude of his own heart .
20 Crumbs of advantage , Bénezet had found , may be picked up in the most unexpected places .
21 Guild members are not content with the position in the cooperative world which may be summed up in the saying of the man ‘ My wife and I are one , and I am that one ’ .
22 These various factors which influence the value of an option may be summed up in the following functional statement : .
23 The visitor to an auction may be caught up in the excitement and drama of the event , but the climate of opinion in which it takes place has been created by scholars and critics as well as businessmen .
24 So even if he believed that from an economic point of view the best decision would be to deny any recovery for emotional injury , he would still ask whether the role of law in encouraging reliance and coordination would be much damaged if he ignored the precedents , and , if it would , whether this loss would be made up in the gains he foresees from the change .
25 Some twenty-four people at least would attend these meetings and all would be put up in the château , or its annexe , and provided with lunch , dinner and breakfast the next day .
26 Produced by electrolysis too much energy would be used up in the process to make it economic while the other method suggested by supporters of the ‘ hydrogen economy ’ — thermal dissociation of water from the heat output of a nuclear reactor is neither a tried nor tested technology .
27 This is one aspect that art historian and critic Deborah Cherry will be taking up in the next issue .
28 This spirit can only travel in a straight line , so when it slides down the roof in the hope of gaining entry to a house , it will be swept up in the air again by the curving gable .
29 Most of the technology going into this third snapshot will be wrapped up in the second quarter , according to business area manager Jon Gossels .
30 This theme will be taken up in the next section .
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