Example sentences of "we [vb base] up [prep] [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 As children , we grow up with the lovely stories in which animals really are people : The Wind in the Willows , Just so Stories , Watership Down .
2 So what are your plans in the next year or two as we head up towards the next winter Olympics ?
3 We catch up with the latest exploits on the portable front in Living with a Notebook .
4 Once , before starting a new stage in the story , we catch up on the other branch of the family .
5 We receive up to a hundred and forty week
6 Well you can see for yourself on Friday , when we meet up with the main man on the golf course ; he 's full of fun and full of hope .
7 And we finish up with the hardy Scottish and Welsh breeds in September and October .
8 All of a sudden , Alfred strike one karate pose there and leap one leap on the front man , knocking him down , grabbed his machine gun and with two more leaps he was past them and through us as we open up like a black red sea and close again .
9 When we draw up in a pitch-black stonewalled alley I wonder about his reaction .
10 We attach great importance to the work of the Broadcasting Standards Council , which we set up under the 1990 Act .
11 We 've got to make sure we get up into the Premier Division first . ’
12 They too have assumed that there is something natural and self-evident about the human individual as a separate physical body , but then , in order to distinguish their own field of enquiry from that of the physical anthropologists , they have reified their special concept of culture to a point where we end up with the implicit definition : " Culture is everything which concerns the life and behaviour of human beings which is not an aspect of human nature , as the physical anthropologists perceive it . "
13 Whichever we use we end up with the following integration for the potential of an infinite line charge :
14 ‘ My task is to fill the hotel but make sure that we live up to the high expectations guests associate with this sort of establishment .
15 Is it more successful in reducing lead times ? ( a question we take up in the following section )
16 Finally , it is possible that tighter control of restrictive practices agreements between firms is one of the factors that provide an incentive for mergers , a subject we take up in the next section .
17 This we take up in the next chapter .
18 If we come up with a different game each time we do drama , what are we teaching the children ?
19 I am making the assumption that Kirov will be able to fill in some of the blanks once we come up with a workable number … probably no more than three .
20 In keeping with the analogy , Campbell holds that the variations are ‘ blind ’ — that we come up with a particular hypothesis is not determined by our current experience , is independent of whether the hypothesis is in fact going to prove true or successful , and is not a correction of previous unsuccessful hypotheses .
21 Once again we come up against the indissoluble limit between the Spirit and Jesus .
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