keep up
English
Etymology
From Middle English kepen up (“to perpetuate, maintain, preserve”), equivalent to keep + up.
Pronunciation
Audio (AU): (file)
Verb
keep up (third-person singular simple present keeps up, present participle keeping up, simple past and past participle kept up)
- (transitive) To maintain; to preserve; to prevent from deteriorating.
- 1992, The Daily Telegraph, London
- The NRA is pumping groundwater into the River Itchen in Hampshire to keep up its flow and is trying to save three streams, the Tong, the Little Stour and the Dour from going dry this summer.
- 1992, The Daily Telegraph, London
- (transitive, idiomatic) To continue with (work, etc).
- 1991, Tennis World, Sussex: Presswatch
- Keep up the good work of entertaining your fans on court Steffi; we know you can do it; your fans are behind you all the way.
- 1991, Barty-King, Hugh, The worst poverty, Gloucester: Alan Sutton Publishing Ltd, pages 85-203
- If the borrower could no longer afford to keep up the payments, the longer he stayed in the home the more the interest bill mounted.
- 1991, Tennis World, Sussex: Presswatch
- (intransitive, idiomatic) To stay even or ahead.
- They ran so fast I could hardly keep up.
- 2012 May 13, Alistair Magowan, “Sunderland 0-1 Man Utd”, in BBC Sport[1]:
- Rooney and his team-mates started ponderously, as if sensing the enormity of the occasion, but once Scholes began to link with Ryan Giggs in the middle of the park, the visitors increased the tempo with Sunderland struggling to keep up.
- 2021 September 8, Howard Johnston, “Network News: HS2 jobs boost - but skills shortage a concern”, in RAIL, number 939, page 16:
- However, there are some warning signs. Phases 1 and 2A labour requirements are expected to peak at around 26,500 over the next two years, and there will be a constant labour demand until 2025-26, but there are signs that the skills training programmes may not be able to keep up.
- To ensure that one remains well-informed about something.
- I always try to keep up with (or "keep up on") current affairs.
- To prevent someone from going to bed or to sleep
- The crying baby kept me up all night
Synonyms
- (stay even or ahead): keep pace
Derived terms
Derived terms
Translations
maintain, preserve
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continue with
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To stay even or ahead
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To ensure that one remains well-informed about something
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Anagrams
Categories:
- English terms inherited from Middle English
- English terms derived from Middle English
- English terms with audio pronunciation
- English lemmas
- English verbs
- English phrasal verbs
- English phrasal verbs formed with "up"
- English multiword terms
- English transitive verbs
- English idioms
- English intransitive verbs
- English terms with quotations
- English phrasal verbs with particle (up)