Example sentences of "up [adv] [prep] [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Springing up microscopically on the double helices to create that most controversial of creatures — the human embryo .
2 Frejji 's voice , making me jump , jolted my headache up on to a new level .
3 Landowners started to complain that the bikes were chewing up their paths , raising the whole ugly debate about access up on to a new plane , and ridge-walks lost some of their grandeur by displaying fat tyre tracks on their grassy sections .
4 Steven cursed inwardly and had to step up on to a low wall above the height of the laser-axles to empty and fill his lungs again .
5 Climbing up on to a high bastion , I looked down over the shimmering interior of the fort and thought of the words that must once have been a set text for the cavalrymen stationed here :
6 Someone lifted me up on to a high chair , so that I was close to his nose .
7 I groped for its neighbour , found it , ducked through the gap and up on to the curved deck of the treadmill .
8 She jumped the last stone , up on to the fern-covered bank .
9 She crossed silently to the tree and swung herself up on to the nearest branch .
10 Hands tugged at the German and helped him up on to the narrow ledge .
11 Wedges of oceanic crust are thrust up on to the overlying sediments of the subduction zone and uplift ensues ( Fig. 3.16 ) .
12 Her small hand grasped his , and he drew her up on to the low walkway .
13 Even when the police car was able to surge up on to the elevated section of the motorway at Chiswick , the stream of traffic moved no faster and the Jaguar continued to glow in Dexter 's headlamps .
14 Gaily heaved and hitched himself up on to the high stool , shoving the bag of laundry between his feet once more .
15 It was a fine summer morning when they left and , avoiding the roads as much as possible , made their way up on to the high muirs on the Lanarkshire/Ayrshire boundary , intending to travel direct towards Priesthill and hoping to take John Browne by surprise .
16 I can not remember just what purpose had taken me up on to the top floor of the house to where the row of guest bedrooms line the corridor .
17 To reach Ariel and her mother , he had to cross the stream ; he did so , night after night , using stepping stones over unearthly flashes of phosphorescence in the water , and stepping up on to the further bank , still unwilling , still keeping his mind on Rebecca and the love he had sworn to her , until once more he found himself at the entrance of Ariel 's cabin , once more gave orders to the guard to leave him , and entered to speak to her , disturbing her rest , though she had come to expect his call ; then after their unsatisfactory exchanges , he would lift the fronds at the entrance and leave again , only to succumb once more , and toss himself off in rage and helplessness , before he skulked back to Belmont .
18 There is also a highly scenic road which you can take up on to the open ski grounds and expansive prospects of Hautacam .
19 Then the boat was moored and Tsu Ma was handing the girls up on to the wooden jetty , the soft rustle of their silks as they disembarked seeming , for that brief moment , to merge with the silken darkness of the night and the sweetness of their perfume .
20 Swinging her boots up on to the Indian bedspread to indicate her lack of concern .
21 He emptied his mind , he walked like an automaton up on to the green ride , seeing at the end of it the cameo of stacked meadows , segments of wood , a church tower .
22 A shallow ramp , suitable for transporting wheelbarrows , will be provided from the waste land south of the Brunstane Bowling Green up on to the old railway embankment .
23 For a moment it seemed as though it had tapped some hidden reserve of strength and would ease itself up on to the opposite bank , and escape into the forest .
24 Other scullions were running in with ladders and lengths of rope , climbing up on to the big stove and scrambling up to the messy lip of the vat in which , judging by the amount of splashing and screaming , the small attendant still survived .
25 ‘ How dare you come barging into my room without knocking ? ’ she gasped , scrambling up on to the rumpled counterpane , two hands going up to her blonde hair as she felt his gaze take a rapid inventory of her voluptuous disarray .
26 Because I have it , whether it 's anything to do with my aristocratic ancestors or the fact that I was brought up properly in the old-fashioned way to respect integrity and honesty and decency .
27 It is also necessary not to view policies in a static way ; they have been built up slowly over a long period and they are still changing .
28 Whilst the earliest phase lasted only a few minutes after the training trial , and the intermediate ones declined within the hour , long-term memory seemed to build up slowly over the first hour after training , and protein synthesis inhibitors would no longer disrupt it if they were administered more than an hour after the training ( Figure 10.1 )
29 He looked up suspiciously at the northern sky , clear and tranquil .
30 Similarly , the database can be built up piecemeal without an organissed data analysis exercise .
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