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

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1 The personal representative may suffer because it may not be possible for him fully to wind up the estate and to obtain a discharge from his fiduciary responsibilities .
2 Television crews were invited to stand in front of the US Embassy and film a senior member of the staff , in black tie and dark suit , as he slowly wound up the folding door of an inconspicuous , metal-framed garage .
3 Then he slowly held up the object he had carried from the car — the object he had found in the gas station .
4 As for Lee Marvin , he eventually gave up the hard liquor .
5 In other words , rather than introducing other , more persuasive factors , he merely sets up the court as the arbiter of a medical issue , and decides that , of all the criteria involved , the crucial ones for determining how the individual is to be regarded by the law are the biological criteria .
6 He 's here , he is here , he just walked up the
7 And the BOR is a friendly fellow too ; he may sometimes be a rough diamond , he may swear and complain about the weather , the food , the British Government , but he shrewdly weighs up the people he meets .
8 He calmly picked up the fallen keys , climbed into the car and drove away , leaving the widow staring at her dead husband .
9 Every time some new one comes out on the market he always calls up the maker and tells them about the small pools win he 's just had . ’
10 As Amiss placed the tray on the table beside Glastonbury 's bed , he quickly sized up the room .
11 She watched as he quickly sized up the situation and then took command .
12 Lyell made people aware by the 1830s of the great age of the Earth , and he also divided up the Tertiary period , using a statistical method based upon the proportions of existing species found among the fossils .
13 One morning he also opened up the building , went upstairs and came down and there was these fresh footprints on a part of the building which he had n't been at that time and he , like myself , looked all over the building and not a soul in sight .
14 He also built up the island 's banana trade .
15 He also built up the railway 's fleet of passenger and cargo ships sailing to Ireland and the Continent from Goole , Fleetwood , and Liverpool ; by 1914 it was the largest of any of the British railway companies .
16 He also set up the renowned Creature Shops to develop animatronics for the film and television industries and which recently made the masks for Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles .
17 Berger watched him for a while , and then he also pulled up the collar of his greatcoat and turned into the corner .
18 Thinking about the bars and wire mesh of her cage , and of how long she would have to be there , he nearly gave up the job there and then .
19 There were three girls , including Nick 's sister Linda ; the other lad was Nick 's close friend , Louis Hanvey , with whom he now propped up the school wall , waiting for the ‘ school-run Mum ’ to arrive .
20 In this passage , which is very near the end of the book , he ironically sums up the manner in which the hypocritical bureaucrats of Whitehall and Washington dealt with their own inadequacies when their major spying operation went wrong .
21 He really livened up the debate .
22 He finished this one quicker than the other two and when that was done he immediately picked up the knife and cut the next slice .
23 It is impossible that Matthew was mistaken or that he simply made up the verse as a climax to his birth story hoping that his readers would not notice .
24 Instead of wasting time hawking his book around the publishing houses , he simply printed up the first three chapters , complete with his own photos and illustrations , and took them out on the streets .
25 He indirectly set up the first try for Kenny Hooks , and his catching and powerful driving off the tail of the line out kept Collegians on the back foot .
26 The pieces were put into ten different bags and driven away by Laing after he meticulously cleaned up the Manwarings ' house in Aldersley Gardens , Barking , east London , the jury was told .
27 Living through the post-Darwinian debates , he invariably took up the cudgels on behalf of scientific rationalism .
28 He then summed up the situation in brusque style for the policeman at the other end .
29 He then brought up the £8000 to £8,000 by steering clear of the OTC , and the vicar was ecstatic that at last he seemed to be making some money .
30 Pushing his arms into the waistcoat , which he then buttoned up the wrong way in his confusion , he pointed to the girl who had lifted the veil of wet hair from her face and was peeking out of one eye .
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