ADJECTIVE
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being up to particular standard or level especially in being up to date in knowledge
always au fait on the latest events
constant revision keeps the book au courant
up on the news
kept abreast of the latest developments
How To Use up on In A Sentence
- Jeff, clad in board trunks and a T-shirt, leans back in his chair with the lappie on his, uhhh, lap, and his bare feet up on the desk. Savages
- Most of this I've written down to get my own thoughts in order before I start draughting letters to the media, but first I have a couple of weeks of university to catch up on… sheesh.
- Over the winter months we've been doing a great deal of clearing up on our part-neglected croft garden, grubbing out and shredding dead shrubs and cutting back those that have either grown too large or are crowding others.
- Had to give up on a couple of nice bulls but that's the haps at that time of year. Help with Colorado Elk
- Often the parent feels helpless and very discouraged and may also give up on the child which reinforces the child's feelings of inadequacy and may cause the child to retreat or regress further.
- Unless you're willing to bone up on the subject, you're better off to assess his technical ability by asking for references and checking them out.
- Thanks to her doctor’s recommendations she finds herself feeling decafargic by noon. cardiacpopups – the messages that popup on your computer when you are in the middle of an important project and warn you that your computer is about to conk out. on 07 Sep 2007 at 5: 52 pm Kimberly defurrify – to remove pet hair/dander from a person or thing on 07 Sep 2007 at 6: 12 pm Heather Writer Unboxed » Blog Archive » Writer Unboxed’s CONTEST, CONTEST!
- Every time I turn around he seems to be checking up on me.
- I must pump the tyres up on my bike.
- It was picked up on a £300 scanner near Andrew's naval base at Portland, Dorset.