get-up
Americanverb
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to wake and rise from one's bed or cause to wake and rise from bed
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(intr) to rise to one's feet; stand up
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(also preposition) to ascend or cause to ascend
the old van couldn't get up the hill
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to mount or help to mount (a bicycle, horse, etc)
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to increase or cause to increase in strength
the wind got up at noon
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informal (tr) to dress (oneself) in a particular way, esp showily or elaborately
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informal (tr) to devise or create
to get up an entertainment for Christmas
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informal (tr) to study or improve one's knowledge of
I must get up my history
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informal to be involved in
he's always getting up to mischief
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informal (intr) to win, esp in a sporting event
noun
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informal a costume or outfit, esp one that is striking or bizarre
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informal the arrangement or production of a book, etc
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Arise from bed; also, sit or stand up. For example, Once I get up and have coffee, I'm ready to work . One of Irving Berlin's earliest hit songs was “Oh! How I hate to Get Up in the Morning” (1918). [Mid-1300s]
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Ascend, mount, as in I hate to get up on a ladder . [First half of 1500s]
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Create or organize, as in She got up the petition against zoning . [Late 1500s]
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Dress or adorn, as in She plans to get herself up in a bizarre outfit . This usage is most often put in the form of the past participle ( got up ), as in The wedding albums were got up with ruffles and lace . [Late 1700s]
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Draw on, create in oneself, as in I finally got up the nerve to quit , or Joe got up his courage and told the boss he was leaving . [Early 1800s] Also see get someone's back up ; also see the subsequent idioms beginning with get up .
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.