Example sentences of "[vb pp] up to a [adj] " in BNC.

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1 These two incidents hardly added up to a minimal knowledge of the principality .
2 All the little steps have added up to a high achievement .
3 Lifted up to a new level and a new nearness to our Lord Jesus Christ .
4 Fitted in-car audio/telecommunication equipment is included up to a total value of £500 .
5 Fitted in-car audio/telecommunication equipment is included up to a total value of £500 .
6 Fitted in-car audio/telecommunication equipment is included up to a total value of £500 .
7 All pipe materials can be painted : copper can be polished up to a fine shine if you like the ship 's engine room effect .
8 The latter had now been built up to a reasonable size with the main mill , a dye house , out buildings , stove , stables , press shop and store houses , as well as the grist mill .
9 ‘ The money I get for the scrap is paid into the Finance Department , and when the fund has built up to a worthwhile sum I 'll be calling for suggestions for a local charity to whom we can donate the cash . ’
10 To help engender trust and familiarity , the field-worker 's contact in the station was restricted at the beginning to a few hours a shift once a week , gradually being built up to a full shift , including mights , twice a week .
11 A territorial sunbird can time its visits to a particular flower such that its nectar has built up to a high level .
12 The basic characteristic of the H.T. is that the flowers are invariably double with so many petals — sometimes to their detriment in wet weather — that the centre becomes pushed up to a high point — in the classic shape that everybody likes to see .
13 This would enable parcels of instruments to be made up to a given value , type or maturity for sale and thus improve their marketability .
14 the anniversary of its incorporation or , if its last return was made up to a different date , the anniversary of that date .
15 They were shown up to a double room , and Paul stood slackly , wetting his lips .
16 A wing-hair was drawn up to a crackling wood fire and Mrs Gotobed sat in it .
17 Gregory Woods 's remark , quoted at the beginning of this article , suggests , in a rather deliriously utopian , post-Barthes kind of way , that any text can be opened up to a gay interpretation if gay readers decide it to be appropriate — authorial intention is here surrendered in favour of a sort of subcultural authorship , a collective ‘ special thrill ’ , a method of analysis based on a recognition of shared structures of feeling .
18 Poorly ventilated and stagnant spaces must be opened up to a constant current of air by the introduction of new ventilation openings as even a vigorous attack of dry rot can be arrested ( but not reduced ) by exposure to fresh air .
19 Customers will be able to opt for discounts worth £20 for every £250 invested up to a maximum investment of £3,750 or for bonus shares on the basis of one for every 10 bought .
20 ‘ That 's why we did not get tied up to a long deal before .
21 Somewhere within that radius there 'll be a receiver , probably rigged up to a voice-activated tape recorder .
22 And I would n't say that we were being fleeced , I mean I , I think we 've always been fleeced up to a certain point but they were always making a loss in the past and
23 If you wish to have separate UICs , simply copy the account you have already set up to a new UIC and VMS account name .
24 Stalls were set up to a considerable depth on either side of the main road , which swelled out like a sausage shaped balloon for half a mile or so and then closed in again .
25 Rents needed to be brought up to a realistic level , housing stock modernized , particularly in some of the rundown areas of Kennington , and surplus sold off , without souring relations with his tenants .
26 This means that all people over pension age who are not in full-rime work have a statutory right to have their income brought up to a guaranteed weekly level .
27 These are linked up to a central control panel which monitors the entire system .
28 This is an excellent idea , as it provides the elderly with independent , private accommodation but with the added security of fitted alarms linked up to a 24-hour warden service .
29 This antagonism towards the idea that land is a kind of commodity is linked up to a particular view of history : the older and middle-aged Shetlanders , especially , emphasise the importance of safeguarding agricultural land .
30 The first is in the village 's neat cemetery , where fields run up to a distant hedgerow and a sign by the gate says ‘ Fast Food Service ’ .
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