Example sentences of "[pron] [vb past] [adv] [verb] up " in BNC.
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1 | And I got rather fed up with work last night actually cos there 's a load of drunken idiots and chatting me up . |
2 | I got really fed up hearing it and thought that one more repetition would send me screaming down the street ! |
3 | ‘ In the past , I got too hyped up because I wanted to do well . |
4 | I 'd already given up trying to please my father . |
5 | But I 'd already started up the spiral . |
6 | ‘ I 'd better go up and take a look , ’ he mumbled again , but he did n't move . |
7 | ‘ I think I 'd better go up and see her . ’ |
8 | ‘ Well , I think I 'd better wash up the breakfast things , if you do n't mind . |
9 | Well go , I think she 's going to be shattered , I 'd better wake up Jo . |
10 | Perhaps I 'd better stop up then . |
11 | And so , it does n't look good if I do n't bring the information in so I 'd better hurry up with that . |
12 | Since I was pipped at the post for the Periodical Publishers ' Association Columnist of the Year award by Maureen Lipman , star of stage and commercial , I thought I 'd better look up her column in She magazine to see how I might bring my stuff up to state-of-the-art standard . |
13 | I suppose I 'd better put up the notice . ’ |
14 | Just a simple explanation will do , such as ‘ I 've thought about this and decided that I 'd better shut up and do most of the listening ’ . |
15 | Er rather than being erm over er at forty thousand , for that we are , are pleased that the extra erm people is in work , but nevertheless we still have this very high level and we have a problem given the restructuring of the economy , I 'd better shut up because my colleagues er Chris and Jane are going to talk about erm another closure intending closure and yet more redundancies again er , it happens in Hatfield . |
16 | I was just about to say I expect you could really make a mess if you tried and then I realized I was covered in and I 'd better shut up . |
17 | I 'd better live up to tradition and carry you over the threshold ! ’ |
18 | ‘ I 'd better own up . |
19 | well perhaps she 'll get round , I 'd better tidy up first then in case |
20 | For example : ‘ I 'd better get up bright and early today . |
21 | Er I was still slobbing around in my dressing-gown and you know yesterday 's clothes and so I I I thought I 'd better get up and do stuff . |
22 | ‘ Now I 'd better get up . |
23 | I 'd almost given up hope that you 'd ever see me as a girl … a woman . |
24 | But I 've walked past so many pretty dresses and little socks with lacy tops , I 'd almost given up . |
25 | I walked slowly back up the shabby road to this now miserable room , thinking all the while of what I ought to do or what I could do if I was ever going to outmanoeuvre these cunning poisoners . |
26 | I dashed straight back up the road to my own house , rang Paul and told him I 'd definitely have one , and maybe two . |
27 | The door had a black painted cast-iron knocker , brass numbers and handle that were polished each week , and when I became old enough to be trusted with this job , I felt very grown up . |
28 | Yet I felt too strung up about my botched performance to listen properly . |
29 | it was fine , I thought right get up and get them bloody curtains washed , I had 'em on the line , but do you think our Mike noticed them , well when he came home from work , because I thought of having to put 'em back up again , I just |
30 | ‘ I said just shut up , ’ he said quietly . |