I've been slowly working up to getting up earlier and have kept it up most of the week. |
|
With a low kerb weight of 960 kg the vehicle gives up to 12 km per litre in city driving. |
|
This would result in a boat that has identical stability to that of the standard boat up to 38-40 degrees of heel. |
|
Luckily the road was fairly empty and I slammed up the gearbox winding the car up to an eyewatering 105 mph. |
|
The vessel to be fitted with winches, derricks, wheels and ordinary runners capable of handling lifts up to 2 tons. |
|
Good brown macle twins up to several carats in weight have been available in recent years from the Udachnaya mine. |
|
The company rejected negotiating a collective work contract and is pushing workers to sign up to a non-union agreement. |
|
A Canadian who got the sack for showing up to work drunk and toting a sawed-off shotgun wants his job back. |
|
With up to 28 seats and room for cargo, it made commercial air travel practical. |
|
It could be argued that we weren't giving the coolers enough time to get fully up to speed. |
|
Day after day I have people coming up to me telling me what to publish and what not to publish. |
|
There has been a definite trend towards premium branding, with consumers trading up to upmarket foods. |
|
Water comes up to the second floor, they are out of gasoline, and food supplies are running perilously low. |
|
Plans have been drawn up to delineate the two small plots with some form of kerbstone and allow for a headstone to be erected. |
|
Is it me, or is it also missing the fact that you'll need to get up to fill the kettle with water in the first place? |
|
Nanowires are crystals only a few nanometers in diameter but up to several microns in length. |
|
Yields of up to four tonnes an acre had been forecast before weather broke. |
|
The votes will be counted up to Monday, July 28 and the election is being overseen by the Electoral Reform Society. |
|
By providing a windbreak, trees also help reduce individual heating bills by up to 30 percent. |
|
It got a lot of media attention, and local art officials were afraid that too many people would show up to watch. |
|
|
Davis saw it first and raced up to warn the pilot, but we were airborne in a few seconds. |
|
The charity Family Matters York is offering a two-hour budgeting course free for students going up to university this autumn. |
|
Saddle-stitch is generally less expensive and may be used to bind smaller books, up to a maximum of ninety-six pages. |
|
Elizabeth looked up to see an adorable girl of about seven holding a small blue ball. |
|
Wrap flexible but sturdy wire around one stake, up to the top of the post and staple it there. |
|
According to folk religious beliefs, babies up to one year old don't have souls and can be considered like small animals. |
|
Mountains of rubbish are piled up to form a landscape that is almost lunar in its desolation. |
|
We drove on the sidewalk, from the sidewalk which was still up above the wheel well, up to Canal Street, where it was a dry area. |
|
The next morning I woke up to my alarm clock, excited to see what my hair looked like. |
|
Yet instead of bringing the country up to the standards, they slide down to the lowest common denominator. |
|
And an agreement has been reached with the United Nations for some safe areas for up to a million villagers. |
|
If she wasn't beating us herself, she was delivering us up to the nuns for a whack. |
|
I climbed up to the old familiar flight deck, slid into the copilot's seat and fastened my safety belt. |
|
To make fibers up to tens of microns across, scientists must align hundreds of the nanotubes into bundles. |
|
She looked down at his hand, bringing it up to her chest, next to her head, a soft smile touching her lips. |
|
The tax owing, plus full interest and penalties could be up to 40,000 euro. |
|
So, all of you, sing a happy, lusty rendition of Happy Birthday for me and then belly up to the bar! |
|
At half-time the game was in the balance but it was then that a number of Coolera players moved up to a higher gear. |
|
I obtained my first cards when I went up to university, then proceeded to spend on them recklessly. |
|
Pushchairs can be wheeled right up to the steps of the aircraft and are then stowed in the hold while the children are carried aboard. |
|
|
The trick we have to do is live up to the image of the white knight in shining armor. |
|
Well I think really it began to falter when I went up to Oxford University to study chemistry. |
|
He recites names, dates, places and conversations from childhood up to now. |
|
The norovirus is highly contagious, affecting up to one million people in the United Kingdom every year. |
|
We still have their reciprocal tables going up to the reciprocals of numbers up to several billion. |
|
What he calls a crack is more like a canyon, at least 300 metres deep up to a kilometre long yet only a metre wide. |
|
An impending skills shortage in the trades means jobs are opening up to women. |
|
The sleek, three-pronged turbines swivel to face the oncoming tide, generating up to 35 kilowatts of electricity each. |
|
This aircraft can carry up to 3,800 kg of air-to-air and air-to-surface missiles, bombs and munitions. |
|
In a nutshell, if someone comes up to you and winds you up, you don't have to become annoyed, and reply in kind. |
|
While the squad broke up to attack various positions the sniper held back to provide cover fire. |
|
I went about my normal day in the shop, maybe a little busier than normal as it was leading up to Mother's Day weekend. |
|
The theatre goes black, and the red curtains part, and go back towards the wings as the stage lights go up to reveal the lobby of a small hotel. |
|
You walk into a shop or into your financial broker's rooms, and it's up to you to know what's in your interest and what's not. |
|
He said under-20 players could be sent on attachment for varying periods of up to six months while under-17 players could go to football schools. |
|
For a fee private subscribers could also be hooked up to receive the time signal. |
|
Depending on the depth of the water in which the tsunami is traveling, it may attain speeds of up to 500 miles an hour. |
|
The tsunami swamped up to 40 percent of the Maldives, an Indian Ocean string of 1,192 coral atolls 480 km southwest of the southern tip of India. |
|
But if you're bilingual and up to your eyeballs in ennui, please be my guest. |
|
There's no point buying several grands' worth of audiophile equipment only to wire it up to cheap speakers. |
|
|
Ok, so they probably set it up to do this ages ago, but I gave up trying quite a while ago. |
|
Now that most of us are wired up to the global village, we have instant access to what it is going on. |
|
The patient sat with both feet and arms in saline baths and was wired up to the machine. |
|
We are wising up to such something-for-nothing marketing schemes which turn out to be the opposite. |
|
The Pagan Federation, an umbrella group which represents Druids, shamans, witches and high priestesses, is now receiving up to 1000 calls a week. |
|
Funnily enough, this doctor now claims that she was well treated and he was going to deliver her up to the Americans anyway. |
|
The route leads towards the double doors that lead to stairs which go up to the south aisle of the church. |
|
Exploring side canyons and clambering up to the surrounding tablelands for an overlook will form part of our journey. |
|
Under a steady drizzle the Ocean Hunter drew up to a small jetty nestled in the heart of a protected bay. |
|
He in fact wanted to jettison anyone who would stand up to his dictatorial tendencies. |
|
Our horses remained saddled up to 12 hours a day, and we rode up to 8 hours daily. |
|
What must it be like to be a CSO in a company whose senior management is up to their eyeballs in fraud and cover-ups? |
|
Sasha, a charity worker, is more interested in cosying up to big fish than touching them for their money. |
|
It takes chimps up to four years to acquire the necessary skills to select and adequately use the tools to crack a nut. |
|
With two reams, he wouldn't have to worry about running out in the middle of a good part and having to get up to run to the store. |
|
Even up to the present day men of intellectual eminence have convinced themselves that astromancy has a foundation of truth. |
|
A GMP spokesman said the crime falls under the common assault category, a conviction for which could lead up to five years in jail. |
|
Base touchers don't really care about what you've been up to and how you've been, unless it affects them. |
|
Cashing a check can take up to 45 minutes because of the multiple book entries, checks, and rechecks that a battery of clerks perform manually. |
|
It's back to lining up to see your diabetic specialist on a regular basis, I'm afraid. |
|
|
She could see he was upset so she walked up to him, hugged him and apologized for keeping him waiting. |
|
The devices would hook up to a TV and connect to the Media Center PC through a wired or wireless computer network. |
|
Simply saying it's time he moved up to the heavyweight ranks for some serious money winnings. |
|
Lightfoot preached his sermon on women in the same summer Maggie Benson went up to Oxford. |
|
Most of the news reports and advisories told people to make sure their security was up to date and their patches current. |
|
Born in Oxford she was privately educated before going up to Newnham College, Cambridge, and later Oxford University. |
|
Illegal migrants and those convicted of harboring them now face a mandatory six months in jail and up to six strokes of the cane. |
|
We've got to show support for these young children to keep their enthusiasm up to become professional players. |
|
If these are rejected, the asylum seekers are given up to 14 days to leave the country. |
|
Lateens, sprits, gaffs and Bermuda rigs could nuzzle right up to the wind for better speed and maneuverability. |
|
All he said was that he was brought up to believe that the man went to work and the woman kept house. |
|
The team won five matches and only dropped one game for the round against Navy in the lead up to the finals. |
|
For the first 150 in Perth you pay 41.6 cents a kilolitre, and for the ones that you use up to 260 you'd pay 67.4 cents for those ones. |
|
Production of winter wheat, harvested in July, was down by up to 50 percent. |
|
Exhausted, he climbed into bed, pulling the thin covers up to his chin, then over his head. |
|
The north-south divide is emphasised by the fact that directors in the north-east and East Midlands also get up to 12 per cent below the average. |
|
The machine is supposed to take up to eight attempts to hit the spot, so I'll give it another couple of goes before writing it off. |
|
He said it would be up to the Air Force how the aircraft was used with its new colours. |
|
I quickly pushed myself and sped to catch up to her, but there were too many people and I had to walk. |
|
It is, essentially, an old phone handset wired up to a standard handphone concealed in his pocket. |
|
|
In the 1980s, Coutts was the bank with whom Sloane Rangers opened an account before going up to Oxford or Cambridge. |
|
Several brave souls dressed up to celebrate the occasion, and lucky you, you get to meet four of them. |
|
We don't bring up to these issues to provoke people to throw a massive revolt or to propagandise political left views. |
|
The sight of the little puppy hooked up to an IV, panting in his vet kennel, was one of the hardest things I've ever seen. |
|
As you couldn't reserve the table, it was up to you to arrive early for dinner to secure your place. |
|
After the defeat at Simbirsk, some other atamans betrayed Razin and gave him up to the authorities. |
|
Simon, born in 1589, was brought up to be a saddler, but spent much of his life in the army, in Ireland and on the Continent. |
|
I had netting up to stop herons getting in but the otter is a different kettle of fish and has got through the netting. |
|
I blame the hostel food finally catching up to me, then going flatting and getting to choose my own food All The Time! |
|
You need to have good horses to compete on the Flat and the ones I get are not up to that standard. |
|
A remote Dales village which has never been connected to a mains water supply has been linked up to a moorland spring. |
|
The Titans line up to kick off once again, but this time their kicker isn't wearing a jersey because he thinks it was bad luck last time around. |
|
Receivers in aircraft or helicopters will typically be able to receive the signals at distances up to about five miles. |
|
A loud squawk startled her, and she looked up to find the gull hanging over the drop-off and glaring at her in what looked like exasperation. |
|
Agroterrorism would be punishable by fines, imprisonment for up to life, and carry the death penalty in the most serious cases. |
|
Thirty-two US airmen arrived at Hoedspruit air base yesterday to set up aid operations for up to 600 American troops. |
|
They expect a wintry mix of snow and rain from North Carolina up to New England. |
|
From the time he went up to Cambridge to the end of his life his system of order was strictly maintained. |
|
On the spinnaker reach to Rayrigg Fiscal Folly pulled ahead, extending its lead in the blustery, fluctuating wind on the leg up to Swan's Nest. |
|
He underplays constantly, but he does step up to the plate to assert himself forcefully from time to time. |
|
|
It even comes with an alarm, a clock, and the ability to store up to 10 of your favorite stations in each of the three frequencies. |
|
And 61 per cent of York residents find it easier to wake up to an alarm clock than a radio. |
|
I woke up to my alarm clock buzzing in my ear, it took me a few minutes to realize where I was. |
|
Perhaps it is time to wake up to the fact that there really is only one person to blame for all these happenings and that is ourselves. |
|
The discharge of the air gun was virtually silent and propelled a projectile that would prove lethal to both man and animal up to 100 yards. |
|
It s no longer really possible to live up to that part of the custom but the spirit remains the same. |
|
Fancy selling your home and trading up to a larger, plusher pad in the near future? |
|
Water from the Ouse will be diverted through a turbine and returned to the river after generating up to 450 kilowatts of electricity. |
|
But the fun rapidly turns into a nightmare when the angry agent shows up to get his girl and doesn't take kindly to the youngster's interest. |
|
Using wireless broadcast technology, each mast has a range of up to 25 miles and can deliver speeds of up to 1.5Mbps. |
|
Generally, ownership of an area of ground includes the airspace immediately above that area up to the skies. |
|
The recent rise in house prices has also been fueled to some degree by existing homeowners trading up to bigger and more expensive homes. |
|
They think all Wiccans and witches are up to no good, worshiping the devil and defying God. |
|
Although he has been used mainly as a wing forward up to now, he's chosen at full forward for tomorrow's match. |
|
But then young Master Thomas had gone up to Cambridge, and Elsie's black mood had descended. |
|
But directors are finally waking up to the idea of him as a serious actor, rather than a Welsh scarecrow fuelled by white-hot energy. |
|
A sad thing is going up to the bar to pour your last glass of whiskey, then discovering your first glass killed the bottle. |
|
To the right, a stair leads up to the choir gallery over the sacristy and priest's office. |
|
The Andean condor, one of the world's largest flying birds, soars on ten-foot wingspans and can weigh up to 33 pounds. |
|
Combined this will reduce the kill by up to 100,000, all of which will occur in the first six months of the year. |
|
|
The receptionist said that she would ask the porter to take the visitor's bags up to his room in the lift. |
|
Tests on pure Paterson's Curse honey have shown that it contains up to 2 micrograms of toxin per gram of honey. |
|
Each day of the players' holiday week, Maloney threw on his training gear, picked up a sack of footballs and made his way up to Barrowfield. |
|
The first test of his leadership, when he will be held up to an hour of merciless scrutiny by the electorate, comes next Saturday. |
|
The large function room holds up to 200 people and the big screen also features the latest sporting events. |
|
I suppose it's hard to score with chicks when you roll up to them on a 10-speed rocking a sack of Ikea catalogues. |
|
To me, it's not terribly important whether or not the theory holds up to scientific scrutiny. |
|
Now it's up to von Tetzchner to prove that, like any accomplished tenor, he can hold a note. |
|
Hanging the towel on a heated rail to dry, I wandered back up to the attic room, combing my hair with my fingers. |
|
In that case it will be up to the more idealistic among us to hold the president to his commitment. |
|
I pulled up to my ex-house and parked in the lavish driveway, buttoning my jacket as I walked up, roses in one hand, keys in the other. |
|
I'm going up to Brisbane later this week for a night on the town with some mates. |
|
Every year, the National Guard counts on recruiting up to 10,000 soldiers after they leave the active duty force. |
|
White cell counts among the patients who have died have been up to 10 times greater than is normally seen with serious infections. |
|
Lords and dukes and counts came up to me in an endless line, bowing and asking for a dance. |
|
While I was there, I made friends and we just clicked and created a special bond that lasts up to now. |
|
Forecasters said it would lash the shores with strong winds, up to 10 inches of rain and waves up to 20 feet. |
|
The existing factory buildings have been spruced up to house exhibition, workshop and office spaces. |
|
The pool house, heated and filled with water to the brimming edges and up to the base of the glazing, projects into the middle distance. |
|
Her track list doesn't add up to anything more than a desire, however noble, to cover folk songs. |
|
|
All of a sudden Muriel got her handbag and went up to him and gave him a king's ransom. |
|
Heroin stays in the system for around a day, whilst cannabis can remain in the body for up to a month. |
|
He said the city could fall behind the competition if its festive lights were not up to their usual high standard. |
|
He set up to share his wired Ethernet Internet connection via his built-in AirPort wireless card. |
|
Most russulas are of medium size, up to 10 cm across the cap, which in young specimens is convex but later acquires a depression in the centre. |
|
Taunting yobs poured white spirit over a 12-year-old girl before holding lighters up to her body. |
|
That implies up to 20 billion yuan would be available for equity investment at home and abroad. |
|
The candles glow, what light there is bounces around on the luminescent green walls, and the sound bounces way up to the high ceiling. |
|
For temple ceremonies, women wear a sabuk belt wrapped around the body up to the armpits, with a kebaya jacket over it. |
|
The club, which trains up to 70 dogs on Sunday mornings, lost a range of equipment including see-saws, tyre tunnels, and A-frames. |
|
Do you want me to grow up to be nothing more than poor white trash with no musical ability whatsoever? |
|
Encouraged by his father to take up to athletics, he took to it like a duck taking to water. |
|
She actually surprised herself when she reached up to grasp his hand without a second thought. |
|
I felt two hands cover my eyes, and I gasped in surprise, reaching up to grasp them. |
|
Four men were seen getting out of a battered Vauxhall Vectra car before squaring up to three others in a 4x4, believed to have been a Landrover. |
|
So whilst the High Church people were reaching down, the Low Church people in a musical sense anyway, were reaching up to feed their traditions. |
|
They kept the track, and rolled off mile after mile before daylight in an effort to catch up to the leaders. |
|
And when the pair split up to try to lose him, he kept up with one and finally managed to arrest him on the Beswick estate in Manchester. |
|
Our leaders need to find the drive, commitment and resources to square up to the challenge. |
|
Cooper refused three attempts by police to get him to provide a breath test and squared up to and threatened an officer. |
|
|
It is a fight he has had to square up to before but in the past it was the fans he had to win over. |
|
Marjorie and Kathleen, played by Beryl Nairn and Anne Cooper, seem to take comfort in squaring up to the reality of their situation. |
|
As you can see, this is already shaping up to be a winner for subtlety and rapier wit. |
|
The aircraft is also capable of carrying a range of aerial bombs with a total weight up to 40 tons. |
|
The most important stage of the season is still to come and now we really have to square up to the challenge. |
|
I want to catch up to all those affluential people who've wasted hundreds of dollars at the tanning salon. |
|
This is a recognition that we need to be more proactive rather than reactive as we have been up to now. |
|
The Orangery, situated within the grade two-listed coach house, can cater for up to 16 delegates. |
|
I bummed a lift up to Hornsby with Rick as a few of the SES guys were up there having a couple of quiet drinks. |
|
I think I'll take a meander up to the midlands this weekend and go see if there is something there I can shoot. |
|
Space objects weighing up to 3,000 kg are transported by sling to the nearest aerodrome. |
|
I think part of it was that staying up to midnight was a rare event, an exciting exception to our daily life. |
|
Now not being a great drinker I would rarely ever need to be in a pub but I went up to give my support. |
|
As they open up to each other about their woes, neither seems to recognise how monstrously selfish and shallow they appear. |
|
Jay pulled her hospital gown up to her chest and lay down flat on her back. |
|
If you are self-employed you should get advice from a good professional if you are not up to speed on pension products and their performance. |
|
In one study, anti-cancer agents were found to be up to 13 times more effective when several foods in a wholefood diet were combined. |
|
Open up to me, they wibble, until you open up to them, and then they resent that you're not more strong, silent and dependable. |
|
Two reading rooms are included, with seating for up to 50 people, 20 microfilm readers, and a study suite for groups. |
|
Naturally I sat up to see what has been happening in the rarefied atmosphere of academia. |
|
|
Pull one of your feet up to your rear, and turn the foot outwards away from the body. |
|
As death draws near, evocative, atmospheric images are offered up to the reader. |
|
The blades were usually double-edged and up to 90 cm, or a little over, in length, but early single-edged sabres are also known. |
|
He did not do much against South Africa and therefore, would be keyed up to prove a point or two. |
|
Don and I spent a lot of time talking about this and going over the plans leading up to surgery as well as the week after surgery. |
|
He and his team now spend time educating people and bringing the company up to speed on grid-computing procedures. |
|
When asthma is satisfactorily controlled, asthmatics need not be restricted from any activity up to and including competitive athletics. |
|
Towards the end of July a friend and I went up to Inverness to pick raspberries. |
|
Post boxes have been placed in shops throughout the town for townsfolk to let everyone know what they were up to when peace was declared. |
|
Don't get me wrong, that's not meant as a criticism of those loyal fans who turned up to watch the game. |
|
In today's competitive economy, it's essential that medical aestheticians stay up to speed with the latest tools of the trade. |
|
When a firm takes on a new graduate it expects him or her to be up to speed with the latest theories and technologies. |
|
Just in case you don't know what I'm talking about I'll try and bring you up to speed. |
|
A class description or a short chat with your instructor should bring you up to speed. |
|
The aircraft provides troop and equipment transport, airdrop and medical evacuation for cargo weighing up to 7,820 pounds. |
|
Over 40' and up to 44' use four yards in a kilted skirt and five yards in a proper. |
|
I have taken my pictures up to 16 times magnification to see things that were astonishing in my pictures. |
|
They aestivate during the dry season but come up to the surface to spawn after the first rains. |
|
It was impossible to disguise the fact that Bolton was keyed up to an almost unbearable pitch. |
|
A teenager has been left deeply shocked after being attacked by a gang of up to ten girls as she walked home. |
|
|
Some of the dancers in the chorus do have the appropriate raunchiness, and all are technically up to the task. |
|
With all that he had achieved up to this point, it's evident that this spell was still one of the prouder moments of a glittering career. |
|
Thus, the total saved cost in all big and middle-sized restaurants or hotels on meals is up to 1 billion yuan every year. |
|
Sung in a deliberately flat tone, this song is a typically acidic musical joke and for that reason it does not stand up to repeated listens. |
|
She got onto the horse, sitting astride it with her skirts pushed almost all the way up to her knees. |
|
I went up to my locker, only to discover that the lock was missing and half my books were gone. |
|
They are usually found in small herds or bands during the summer, but in larger aggregations of up to around 100 individuals in the winter. |
|
And when you separate the illness from the patient, you free the parents up to be aggravated and very clear about what they're fighting. |
|
Second, it would be up to him, as the lawyer, to be best placed to identify a conflict. |
|
When mixed with fine aggregate used in concrete, these cements reportedly achieve strengths up to 14,000 psi. |
|
The lower deck was a series of small rooms and a ladder leading up to the deck. |
|
She was still affectionate towards the family, but she didn't warm up to people as easily as she once had. |
|
What is shaping up to be a potential Asian version of Walt Disney is, it seems, only just beginning to be realized. |
|
Participants in the program will not be detained and will be given up to 90 days in which to put their affairs in order. |
|
Everyone's eyes were wide when they opened, but Ricky rushed right up to the dogs. |
|
The first generation of LTE will offer speeds at up to 100 Mbps, according to the Commission. |
|
I heard and looked up to see the cab driver looking at me through the rear-view mirror. |
|
The Airmen showed vast improvement unlike in the league when they failed to show up to be placed last in the league. |
|
No other nation has ever been quite so obsessed by defining what it is, or troubled by the idea that reality might not measure up to the ideal. |
|
I have a friend who is selling a product that is supposed to eliminate up to 30 pounds of toxic waste from the colon. |
|
|
The Clean Streets Committee has dug in to bring its neighborhood up to Beacon Hill white-glove standards. |
|
There are people's lives at stake and our country is up to it and the people here are up to it. |
|
Bravery also requires recognizing when standing up to these threats is reasonable and appropriate, and it requires acting on one's recognition. |
|
Dustin said he had found asbestos chunks up to 10 centimetres square. |
|
Sizzurp-sized helpings of cough syrup can exceed up to 25 times the recommended dose. |
|
When life gets traumatic do you prefer to hunker down and grieve in private, or open up to others? |
|
The Standing Committee shall have the power to co-opt up to a further two members, and may be afforced by members of the central administration by invitation as appropriate. |
|
Thirty years ago, in the midst of a double-barrelled open-heart surgery, I suffered a complete heart block and was wired up to an external pacemaker. |
|
The heat got up to a punishing 87 today, but my medication got me through that by lowering my body temp until I shivered under my quilt in an agued state. |
|
No signs of copper toxicity appeared at doses up to 6 grams. |
|
Then he had to work through rehearsals leading up to a realization. |
|
But beware the weather and make sure your navigation is up to scratch lest you be led astray, for this is wild country and the consequences can be serious. |
|
That is to say, missionaries trained in the lower 48 states came up to Alaska to establish and serve churches among the Eskimo and Athabaskan peoples. |
|
Are India's regional parties, and their leaders, up to going glocal? |
|
Although it is usual for ships to berth on arrival, there are times when vessels face delays of up to ten days waiting at the pilot station before being allowed into port. |
|
Yes, a president needs courage to stand up to corruption and criminality in his own country. |
|
I saw a couple today with their trackie tops on, zipped up to the top! |
|
Proceeds remitted into Ireland from the disposal of an asset which realised a gain will be treated as a remittance of the gain up to the value of that gain. |
|
I pulled myself up to the next hold and continued up for about five feet. |
|
At totality, the moon hides the sun for anything up to seven minutes. |
|
|
If you start wiring your computer equipment up to your video equipment its not long before everything disappears under a mountain of leads and power cables. |
|
Two bars offer brisk service, and the bartenders will occasionally let you order up to four tiny drinks at a time, with rum, gin, vodka and rye on the menu. |
|
The exhaust from an ion engine travels up to 10 times faster than does the exhaust from a chemical engine, generating far more thrust per pound of propellant. |
|
Now up to issue 15, blimey that went fast, this highly insightful fortnightly gives you the low-down on the latest buzz rising from the underground. |
|
But tough luck, we did, and now we have to belly up to the fallout. |
|
He stepped out of the car and gave himself up to the astonished officers. |
|
I was vaguely tired, but a little too keyed up to take a nap. |
|
Bring us up to speed on the investigation as to where we are now. |
|
Now pilots or crew chiefs moving to another aircraft type will be able to quickly get up to speed on any differences in how the new aircraft operates in a combat zone. |
|
Lilly was too keyed up to pay attention to Heather's doses of sarcasm. |
|
More importantly, are we, the electorate, up to the glocal standard? |
|
I only had three hours of tech rehearsal, and that's usually a full load getting the sound and light cues up to speed for one show, much less four. |
|
Be sure to quickly bring your heels up to your rear in a tight tuck. |
|
Ah, with that cute smile one can only hope that she grows up to be a good person, still acts her age and does not become the typical self-conscious Indonesian celebrity. |
|
Every time I think that the studios are slow in getting what's going on out here, the traditional media rears up to let me know that they're even slower. |
|
He came to Phoenix once and we went up to see him, and they got so crazy that I ended up trying to hitchhike home. |
|
Moderately well developed black rutile crystals weighing up to about 0.5 kilograms are reported from the Kimberley area and at Coodardy, Western Australia. |
|
This is most common at large companies that don't want to spend the time to get a newcomer up to speed with the operations of a large public company only to then rehire again. |
|
Over the weekend, three customers came up to Parker, without prompting, and thanked him for the quality of the customer service. |
|
Debra lifted out the black bottle, shook it, held it up to the light. |
|
|
Just why a public body should set itself up to start a fight against its own public is a mystery to me but they sure have a fight on their hands now! |
|
Gentle whiffs of his cologne floated up to her from the coat. |
|
He calmly walked up to her a mischievous smile on his winsome face. |
|
Upon reaching the bright blue door she opened it and went into a small central room, walking right up to the desk and meeting the secretary's eyes. |
|
I turned my head up to see his smiling face glowing down upon me. |
|
Artists' impressions have been drawn up to simulate how the classroom could look, with a boggy area designed to encourage frogs and other insects to the land. |
|
Many other episodes were covered up to protect him from the media. |
|
The first card in each centre stack must be an ace, then 2, 3, and so on in sequence up to queen, each card played being one higher than the card it covers. |
|
Once the system is powered on, coolant flows to the bottom, extracts heat from the soil, and flows back up to be cooled again. |
|
He looked a bit shocked when I turned up to collect my winnings wearing a pink top and a skirt, something he got used to a few years later when I started to work for him. |
|
A group of hippos who were wallowing in the water the far side of the river stuck their heads up to watch us as we unloaded our kayaks and canoes. |
|
To our right, carpets of flowers reach up to a thick cloud cover. |
|
One flight was cancelled at Leeds Bradford Airport with delays ranging from 10 to 45 minutes, while 100 flights were held up by up to more than an hour at Manchester Airport. |
|
Final preparations before racing begins are well under way and Ascot has now placed its livery and branding on the run up to the racecourse and over the winning post. |
|
Fourteen large wind turbines are spread across the slopes of Beinn Ghlas in Argyll, their blades turning in the breeze to produce up to 600 kilowatts of electricity each. |
|
Have a good listen right up to the part where the glockenspiel comes in. |
|
As the 11-2 chance cruised up to the leaders in the straight, he sat as still as a mouse and it was not until the final furlong that he began to press the button. |
|
The pilot had earlier called air-traffic control reporting heavy clouds and asked to move up to 38,000 feet from 32,000 feet. |
|
Or perhaps babies rely on an innate facility for making automatic distinctions of up to three or four items without counting them out, as some other scientists theorize. |
|
No doubt CTB members will even now be donning the sackcloth and ashes before going up to apologise to the Lake District National Park Authority for their previous invective. |
|