How To Use Rake up In A Sentence

  • Would they not rake up the past and find clues that had led to my fate?
  • I can't rake up the leaves from the grass yet - it's far too muddy and wet for that.
  • In Stuttgart in 1983 the so-called Stuttgart Mandate was issued calling for a brake upon agricultural expenditure.
  • Rake up the trash in the yard and burn it, we will have some guests tonight.
  • Confined to the fine arts, this clinging to the safe and known was just a brake upon innovation and exuberance.
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  • Above us, among the stones of the slope, hang bunches of Christmas fern; around the foot of the trees we uncover trailing clusters of gray-green partridge vine, glowing with crimson berries; we rake up the prince's-pine, pipsissewa, creeping-Jennie, and wintergreen red with ripe berries -- a whole bouquet of evergreens, exquisite, fairy-like forms that later shall gladden our Christmas table. The Hills of Hingham
  • In Stuttgart in 1983 the so-called Stuttgart Mandate was issued calling for a brake upon agricultural expenditure.
  • She helped her father to rake up the dried grass into piles.
  • Dats what happens when teh cops come to brake up a catnip pardee. *nods* Catnip Party Explosion - Lolcats 'n' Funny Pictures of Cats - I Can Has Cheezburger?
  • (though I never heard they exposed him to more peril than that of a broken head, or a night's lodging in the main guard, when wine and cavalierism predominated in his upper storey), had found it a convenient thing to rake up all matter of accusation against the deceased Stephen. The Heart of Mid-Lothian
  • You could rake up the rubbish but a leaf blower would make much lighter work of it. The Sun
  • Then we can rake up the autumn leaves and simply burn the evidence. The Sun
  • Rake up the trash on the ground.
  • In Stuttgart in 1983 the so-called Stuttgart Mandate was issued calling for a brake upon agricultural expenditure.
  • You tend to dwell on the past and rake up old issues which open old wounds and bring fresh pain in relationships.
  • Confined to the fine arts, this clinging to the safe and known was just a brake upon innovation and exuberance.
  • In Stuttgart in 1983 the so-called Stuttgart Mandate was issued calling for a brake upon agricultural expenditure.
  • I am loth to rake up any of these ancient scandals from their well-deserved oblivion; but I must make good a statement which may seem overcharged to the present generation, and there is no _pièce justificative_ more apt for the purpose or more worthy of such dishonour than the article in the _Quarterly Review_ for July, Thomas Henry Huxley; A Sketch Of His Life And Work
  • Than sone after was callid a set a parliament, wherynne alle the comoens were aggreed, and rightfully electe hym as heire apparent of England, nought to procede in any other matiers till that were graunted by the lordes, whereto the kyng and lordes wold not consent nor graunte, but anon brake up the parliamente. A Chronicle of London from 1089 to 1483 Written in the Fifteenth Century, and for the First Time Printed from MSS. in the British Museum
  • I don't think it necessary to rake up their old quarrels.
  • She helped her father to rake up the dried grass into piles.
  • I suppose that, at the beginning of this chapter, one had the notion that, by hard scratching through musty old records we might rake up vague, more than doubtful data, distortable into what's called evidence of unrecognized worlds or constructions of planetary size -- The Book of the Damned
  • Well Miss Mollie I had a good laugh at the Sergt Maj When I told him what you wrotehe is such a modest young man, it made him blush. he is perfectly carried a way and if you send many more such messages to him he will go up the Spot. but I have not much fears about you & his Lordship [unclear: getting] married for this reason. he is so very diffident and your shiness of man; Will make it a matter of impossibility to get up a match With out calling in the Third person & of course that Will be my self, of course, and of course, you Will find out that I will do all in my Power to brake up the match as I have an Intrist in your future Welfare myself. Augusta County: James H. Blakemore to Mary Anna Sibert, September 11, 1864
  • She helped her father to rake up the dried grass into piles.
  • I am loth to rake up any of these ancient scandals from their well-deserved oblivion; but I must make good a statement which may seem overcharged to the present generation, and there is no piece justificative more apt for the purpose or more worthy of such dishonour than the article in the Quarterly Review for July, Thomas Henry Huxley A Sketch Of His Life And Work
  • You could rake up the rubbish but a leaf blower would make much lighter work of it. The Sun
  • He would accelerate, then pull the handbrake up and then he would have to keep really good control of the steering wheel as the car spun round.

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