Example sentences of "put up [prep] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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No Sentence
1 Mhm , when I started in here er I just got put up to work beside one of the women , she just showed me ,
2 I would remind Ben that I put up To Bolt or Not To Be , a widely recognised 8b/c , in November 1986 ; that I have since climbed more than 20 routes of this level or more ; that I repeated the roof at Volx fairly easily in 1990 ; and that I have since put up two more 8cs — Huevos in 1991 and Macoumba Club recently at Orgon — in addition to Just Do It .
3 Concerns have been the small number of inter-disciplinary and student-led projects put up for funding .
4 APIVOTAL £21million stake in besieged merchant bank Morgan Grenfell was yesterday put up for auction by Hanson as talks which could have heralded a Morgan-BZW merger broke down .
5 Their finished works , scarcely dry , were then put up for sale , promoted , sometimes bought .
6 I put up for sale the service areas on new long leases , retaining some controls only to ensure that the areas were safe stopping places for motorway travellers .
7 Meanwhile , to keep as much of its collection as possible in New York City , the Society is offering other New York institutions the right of first refusal in the purchase of its works put up for sale .
8 The highlight of this sale of French and continental furniture and tapestries is to be found among pieces put up for sale by Lord Elgin and supplied to his ancestor Thomas , the Seventh Earl , by Martin-Eloy Lignereux .
9 Fourth Division Cardiff City were yesterday put up for sale at £2 million by the club 's financial controller .
10 Kumar 's company , BRS Kumar Brothers , has gone into receivership and its 84% stake in the first division club is part of the assets put up for sale by the receivers .
11 They could have done it last Friday put up with mind
12 No I think I think animals are fantastic they way they put up with pain .
13 This occurs at the transition between sectors , at the barriers put up by subject boundaries in secondary schools , and at the ability barriers erected by streaming and banding .
14 Nurses , who watch groups of older people getting together to role-play interactions with professionals , learn a great deal about the barriers which busy professionals put up in order to avoid real communication .
15 ‘ I 'm interested in being part of a subversive band of people who live or die by what they put up in front of an audience .
16 But why do I have to put up with election leaflets coming through my letter box at 6.30am ?
17 Did anyone else have to put up with Man U banter in pubs and clubs last May ?
18 It leads participants to put up with exploitation , for instance , with lack of real choice and an inability , despite exercising different points of view , to alter the real political and economic situation .
19 There were girls who were prepared to put up with fat .
20 Of course , the Signature is gold-plated throughout while the JD has to put up with chrome .
21 My wife and family have had to put up with abuse . ’
22 Even the most obtuse of the Hindi fanatics will have to , willy nilly , sooner or later , accept the logic of the situation : if they want to save the nation , they have to put up with English .
23 Whereas hostility was expressed towards me in the taunts and jeers of my classmates and even by physical assault , I reckoned that Elsie would have had to put up with prejudice of a different sort .
24 Some of you thought that you had problems with the R5 commentators … you were lucky , I had to put up with norman hunter on BBC radio Leeds .
25 I 'd forgotten what a delicious meal tea could be ; and sitting there I felt invaded by the envy of the man who lives in an institution , and has to put up with institution meals and institution everything else , for the rich private life of the established .
26 It was hard to imagine Eleanor 's contrariness , since she rarely saw it , but even , Dorothea told herself , were she the dearest , most unselfish soul in the world , she is old , nevertheless , Alida has to carry heavily trays up and down stairs and see the food being left uneaten , to get up in the middle of night after night , to listen to the rambling memories , to put up with incoherence and with having to repeat everything because her mother did not remember .
27 Those who feel that patience , trust and a capacity to put up with uncertainty are gifts rather than skills — and gifts which not all adults share — will doubt whether these personal dispositions can be amenable to training .
28 Please help to publicise membership in class — ‘ stand up ’ boards are available for you to put up in class .
29 Mr Fyfe said that , although in great pain , he put up with press and television interviews , most recently immediately before the start of the commission to which he gave evidence , in the belief that it was a good cause .
30 ‘ Charles never put up with discomfort for the sake of it , but this is carrying grandeur too far . ’
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