Example sentences of "have [verb] up [prep] " in BNC.

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1 that 's gon na go have to go up to .
2 Yeah we thought it important to send to you because we are , you know , a bit out of the way that 's all and erm people tend to go zipping past and have to go up to the roundabout and come all the way back down again cos it 's quite a busy road this and
3 No we are gon na watch Playbus and then we 'll have a bath and then we have to go up to the shops because today is mummy and daddy 's wedding anniversary .
4 I have to go up to the hospital twice a week to day assessment unit , where they are doing test on the baby just to monitor its progress and see if everything is going okay .
5 Ah yeah , but we used to have three thousand have to go up with .
6 We have to go up over the fell . "
7 It is very important that teenagers should never feel rejected by their parents , either because the parents really have given up on them or else because they treat them with coldness and apparent disapproval or dislike .
8 I know that although the doctors have given up on me , the GREAT PHYSICIAN who you and I know will not give up on me .
9 The unit reports to IBM president Jack Kuehler with the mission to retain as customers those users worldwide that have given up on mainframes altogether and are moving to open systems .
10 ‘ The art museums of the United States have given up on great shows with the exception of Carter Brown , and now he 's out .
11 We only start to talk about sacrifice with our children when something seriously wrong has happened in the relationship , when the mother or father says bitterly : ‘ Do n't you understand what I have given up for you ?
12 These factors have stacked up against the amateur game : a preponderance of Tours to house players ; a huge glamour industry attached to the pro game that seduces the players ; parents wanting to push their sons into a life of perceived prestige and an automatic aspiration to be a pro among most players of ability .
13 The shadow health secretary Robin Cook has launched Labour 's campaign on the NHS with a visit to a hospital where some patients have to wait up to two years to see a consultant .
14 At successively' shorter wavelengths , IRAS sees clouds that have broken up into smaller and warmer cloudlets — as theory predicts — and the sources shining at 10 micrometres have probably completed the process and have just become stars , shining by their interior nuclear reactions .
15 The eight to 10 weeks after schools have broken up for the summer are the peak period for tour operators , and it is only around mid-September that they can judge how successful they have been .
16 ‘ I have broken up with my boyfriend and I ca n't bear to let any man touch me .
17 Security is lost and the traditional social networks have broken up in favour of the commercial nexus .
18 Palatine now brew their own house lager ( ‘ Palatinate ’ ) and have joined up with a number of other smaller regional breweries to market independent products such as Dulverton Cider .
19 Now , the academics ( or rather the best of them ) have caught up with the real world .
20 But now his injuries have caught up with him , despite a brave battle to recover from recent knee surgery .
21 ‘ This is for people who have had a passing interest in Hendrix or have caught up with his music in the advent of the CD age .
22 Now your tricks have caught up with you and you have to live here until you can persuade us that you will be an honest rabbit . "
23 You went to find him — did n't you ? — for his creditors have caught up with him at last .
24 ‘ And just when you think you have caught up with them they 've moved on to something else . ’
25 ‘ You — have caught up with your sleep after the weekend ? ’
26 My , my years have caught up with me you know .
27 Excuse me for not writing more as I have to catch up with some sleep and get to a meeting about the course by 10 a.m. tomorrow !
28 Some of the largest US banks , e.g. Bank of America or Citibank , have earned up to 50 per cent of their annual profits from international operations ; thus a US banking presence overseas is likely to be maintained or increased in future years .
29 For in the topsy turvy pecking order which is the current Russian economy , the middle class academics , civil servants and doctors have wound up at the bottom of the wages spiral , their savings largely , meaningless .
30 A tea may be paid if overtime is outwith normal hours or a dinner if you have to work up to and after 8.30 pm , on the same basis as the lunch .
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