Example sentences of "[adv] [verb] up in [art] " in BNC.

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31 Meredith was suddenly swept up in an insane desire to impress , well , produce something decent .
32 Real owners might do the same thing but perhaps end up in a Relais & Chateaux hotel rather than the Place d'Italie .
33 we shall all end up in the same place
34 Now upstairs there are people working , so when you get to the far end we ask you do n't go straight upstairs , if you can wait please and we 'll we 'll we 'll all you 'll all go up in the room together , .
35 This is rare in cars of this type , which tend to be fun for the driver , but a bore for anybody unlucky enough to end up in the back .
36 Downstairs you could n't see her hair because it was all screwed up in a knot .
37 If you find such terms as ‘ Uniform Edition ’ , ‘ Valima Edition ’ , ‘ Border Edition ’ ( and even ‘ Author 's Edition ’ ) you will almost certainly be correct in deciding that the volume can not be a ‘ first ’ but forms part of a , later collected edition , all dressed up in a special format — a ‘ uniform ’ , in fact .
38 Mum kept out of sight until he had left , then down the stairs she came , all dressed up in a long black taffeta dress , which rustled when she moved .
39 Obsessionals are very good at dividing up their minds as it were , but they 're not necessarily divided up in the sense of conscious and unconscious .
40 Kidderminster , Redditch , Blackpole and Worcester joined together to make their book donations and presented 32 books to eight local schools , all loaded up in a JS trolley .
41 I can always remove it later if something better comes up in the interim .
42 The loyalty oath duly turned up in the book — Major Major is blacklisted and is thereby debarred from taking the oath .
43 Professor Dyos ' study of Camberwell was the first in a series of examinations which have enabled us to see how the ubiquitous terraced streets of our great cities were laid out and slowly built up in a highly complex way , for a whole series of social and economic reasons .
44 He is very well in on a 7lb higher mark than when hacking up at Ascot in October , and has since bolted up in a conditions race at Newbury .
45 The next time they came Allen was already hidden up in a beech-tree above where they stood and Marian was far off wandering among her swine looking for flowers .
46 No matter where you finally wind up in the advertising business , you will want to work at some stage in an agency to gain real insight into advertising and acquire first-rate skills ( and , hopefully , reputation ) that puts wheels under your career .
47 I 'd sooner wind up in a debtors ’ prison ! ’
48 Only they will probably both know that these must not include anything too worrying or controversial , which could create the type of tension and anxiety that can so easily build up in the elderly , particularly in the many who suffer from circulatory troubles , or who have a naturally anxious personality which has become even more vulnerable with age .
49 The questions tumbled from him as he went hand in hand with Beth , down the stairs and into the kitchen , where Peggy was soon caught up in the excitement .
50 He was soon caught up in the wartime expansion of government activity , being concerned mainly with the regulation of foreign trade .
51 So I think the seminar itself was n't giving you much new stuff , it was stuff that we 've already picked up in the course .
52 Learn to study ahead of the lectures by using the techniques of chapter 4 in the section on Key words and Pattern of notes and by drawing pattern diagrams for two topics soon to come up in the lecture programme .
53 Mud , as a solution to the world 's housing problem , is thus caught up in an intricate economic , social and political web .
54 Then turn to the opposite direction by stepping with the left foot about a shoulder 's width to the left , thus ending up in a left forward stance in the opposite direction .
55 I have the feeling that if oil supplies were somehow caught up in the Yugoslavian position , an armed intervention force would already be in that country .
56 I asked several times but eventually was just caught up in the crowds . ’
57 ‘ I 'll just finish up in the kitchen . ’
58 Since they had started paying ‘ interest ’ , they no longer woke up in the middle of the night squealing with fright from nightmares .
59 But , in fact , virtually no behavioural tendency which constitutes genuine action can just show up in a cultural context ‘ as itself ’ .
60 In a feverish rush , an agreement was finally drawn up in the corridors outside the court room , under which Virgin were entitled to one more album of Sting 's songs ( Synchronicity ) and also retained the ‘ exploitation ’ rights on existing material for a further eight to ten years .
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