Example sentences of "[noun pl] up [prep] [art] [num ord] " in BNC.

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1 No it , I think it actually runs on the sixteenth but it only looks at premiums up to the fifteenth , think that 's built into the , the , the parameters on it .
2 But it put premiums up by a third — and that cut losses from £88 million to £39 million in the six months to June .
3 ‘ We 've just got to get our heads up in the second half of the season and go all out to qualify for Europe again . ’
4 Villa had their tails up in the second half and Atkinson and Staunton both had chances to increase their lead .
5 Liverpool may have been five goals up from the first leg , but this was never going to be an easy game in 70-degree heat and on a typically bumpy Mediterranean pitch .
6 There were brambles up to the first floor . ’
7 Meanwhile , England women also finished their team event with a splendid 3–0 win against Hungary and finished in fifth position , four places up on the last European Championships in Gothenburg .
8 The commission was paid on a reducing basis so a substantial amount of commission was paid in respect of the premium paid in the first policy year and a lower commission in subsequent years up to the tenth year .
9 So we see that if you have a school that goes up to the ninth grade , the Ministry covers the costs up to the sixth grade but the other years are paid for by parents .
10 Going back inside the house , the two staircases up to the first and second floors were dark as neither had windows , the only light available came from open bedroom doors .
11 At present every tenant makes as much hay as supports his stock in winter ; and has not only potatoes , cabbages , and meal in abundance for his family , but also frequently sells corn and potatoes , and feeds his cattle up to a third more weight than his predecessors were wont to do .
12 Hereford wrapped things up in the second half .
13 In their defence , Oxford did pick things up in the second half , Druce did all the running , Walker placed the header , but Salmon was n't going to let the match slip through his fingers .
14 MARKS & Spencer has just reported half-year profits up by a fifth , yet many investors will have been mystified to note that the stock market reaction was for the share price to fall back a bit .
15 Deviations from ideality , as we have seen in section 9.7 , are conveniently expressed in terms of virial expansions , and when solutions are sufficiently dilute , the results can be adequately described by the terms up to the second virial coefficient A 2 while neglecting higher terms .
16 but er they were a bit of a nuisance because more than once , I must admit I erm , I collided with them which rather made me aware of their presence but anyway erm , then just beyond I am sorry , on the erm right hand side , a little way down this corridor , were the stairs up to the next floor which was in those days Public Health
17 Obviously we do not want to be in two minds up to the last day and he would n't do that but there is quite a a period of discretion where the time gets shorter and er he would have to make a judgement .
18 In Rowntree 's examples of typical streets in 1900 , in the poorest streets up to a third of the householders were widows , in contrast to less than 5 per cent in the best working-class districts .
19 But manager Derek Brownbill explained : ‘ We rolled our sleeves up in the second half and showed a lot of character .
20 The rates charged are the same as first class inland rates ( except that letters up to the first weight step sent at the Forces surface letter rate will be accepted at BFPO address in Europe ) .
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