Example sentences of "[adv] [vb pp] up with the " in BNC.

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1 One of them died soon afterwards ; and the other one — I saw it myself-was so bad and its head so swollen up with the stings that it had to be supported in its stable by a kind of sling fixed to the roof . ’
2 Actually they 're all er they are , nearly all of them have been broken so they 've obviously caught up with the list from the .
3 The legend recounted how seventy translators had worked in independent cells and had all come up with the identical version of the sacred text .
4 This is gently mixed up with the compost and the worms get to work .
5 This is why Peter gets so steamed up with the sales people from the software houses .
6 We got so fed up with the leaking roof that we decided to try and mend it with some tar .
7 It is entirely tied up with the intensity of interest or desire which you apply to the various things you do .
8 To the Idealists , man was essentially ‘ a social creature ’ and one very much bound up with the State .
9 The reconversion of one portion of the value of the product into capital and the passing of another portion into the individual consumption of the capitalist as well as the working class form a movement within the value of the product itself in which the result of the aggregate capital finds expression ; and this movement is not only a replacement of value , but also a replacement in material and is therefore as much bound up with the relative proportions of the value-components of the total social product as with their use-value , their material shape .
10 Like its fragmented nature , housework 's ‘ never-endingness ’ is so much bound up with the idea of housework that the two are not conceived apart .
11 The history of the use of herbs in food is naturally bound up with the history of food itself .
12 It was also a source of fees for more distant associates and although such relationships were more vulnerable to dynastic change , because less bound up with the territorial dominance of the lord of Middleham , some did nevertheless survive the transfer of power in 1471 .
13 It was also a source of fees for more distant associates and although such relationships were more vulnerable to dynastic change , because less bound up with the territorial dominance of the lord of Middleham , some did nevertheless survive the transfer of power in 1471 .
14 Something of a spiritual vacuum prevailed following the discrediting of the orthodoxy hitherto imposed , and the values that had been so obviously tied up with the victor 's success and the material prosperity of the US seemed to be espoused with enthusiasm .
15 It was all tied up with the rigid censorship restrictions of the 1940s .
16 It was then , when she thought about it , that she decided that she was just a little fed up with the bossy brute .
17 She was getting a little fed up with the habit he had of never allowing her to finish a sentence .
18 ‘ We want to win every game so while it was a good performance we were a little fed up with the result . ’
19 I do get rather fed up with The Lancashire Witches and Mist Over Pendle , but there you are .
20 I learned so much and soon caught up with the fleet ’ .
21 American unionism has had the inestimable advantage of being born in a land whose social landscape was not cluttered up with the debris of a feudal age .
22 One can speculate that if Mezey had not come up with the idea of dispensing with two hospitals , and of the remaining four being given a quadrant of the region to serve each , the idea that it was an RHA rather than local management responsibility to deal with the issue , might never have stuck in the minds of senior regional officers .
23 Even then , major subscribers like the US and the USSR had not come up with the necessary money .
24 and what you 've got to be very careful , cos you ca n't offer them and not come up with the goods
25 Clearly Balliol had not caught up with the decimated decoy party .
26 ‘ New linguistics ’ , for us , included books on English by , , and ; but at that time we had not caught up with the new developments associated with .
27 He was ‘ more largely mixed up with the principal people and events of his time than any other man ’ ( Charles Greville , Greville Memoirs , 1874–8 ) .
28 It must have been legal , ’ said the Archdeacon , who had just caught up with the conversation .
29 This was odd , since the BBC had just come up with the figures of 301 for the Tories and 298 for Labour .
30 I was just fed up with the whole situation .
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