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29 Sentences With "drifting up"

How to use drifting up in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "drifting up" and check conjugation/comparative form for "drifting up". Mastering all the usages of "drifting up" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Many more began drifting up towards Trafalgar Square and Pride.
"The risk of exit is drifting up a bit, but it's drifting up having come down with quite a wallop on the day that Obama interjected," RBC Capital Markets currency strategist, Adam Cole, said.
There are rainbow flares; Snapchat animal masks drifting up; mysterious bursts of applause.
The sun rising, and the incessant thump of techno drifting up from below us.
But there was something else, something familiar, drifting up and hitting me like an intoxicating inhalant.
As the panel went on my eyes kept drifting up to the painting that hung behind the participants.
A fire crackles nearby, its tiny cubic embers drifting up into a chimney, and stairs behind you climb up to a second floor.
Bask in the astronomical wonder of seeing all the brightest planets out at the same time, pinpricks of worlds drifting up from the horizon.
Winds move in different directions and at different speeds depending on the altitude, so stratollite's minders can steer it by drifting up or down.
But, on the rare mornings Poke awoke on the fading carpet of the room, he could watch crowds from the chapel drifting up the block.
Toronto's largest help defenders reacted immediately, with Serge Ibaka sliding off Giannis Antetokounmpo to cut off Middleton's drive and Jonas Valanciunas drifting up to help the helper.
"Based on the renewable fuel standard of 2017 and 2018, I expect that RIN prices are going to be drifting up during the course of 2017," Lipow said.
It often trades at a lower level when the market is "boring," or gradually drifting up (reminiscent of the old Wall Street saying to "never short a dull tape").
In a speech Tuesday, Williams also said he considers the U.S. economy to be "in a very good place" and inflation to be drifting up to the Fed's 2% longer-term goal.
But the premium market is definitely drifting up, and we're going to see more stratification than we used to have, even while things like dual-camera systems become table stakes for most devices.
Smartphones as a general class, not just the iPhone, have been drifting up in price over the past couple of years as companies try to differentiate with ever more premium features (which cost more to manufacture).
Japan, like the euro zone, is experiencing one of its best economic years in the past two decades, drifting up with the rest of the global economy but also showing impressive domestic performance and more reason for hope for the future.
IF YOU DON'T HAVE THOSE TARIFFS COMING ON, YOU KNOW, YIELDS -- AND YOU CAN LET THE ECONOMY RUN AND IF YOU HAVE THE STIMULUS IN CHINA, YOU'LL PROBABLY HAVE YIELDS DRIFTING UP, WHETHER THEY GO TO 3 1/4, 3 1/2, WHATEVER.
"Now the U.S. is saying they're going to ... take away those waivers again, and the oil price is clearly drifting up because of that," he told CNBC's Brian Sullivan during an interview at the Milken Institute Global Conference in Beverly Hills, California, on Tuesday.
Those unhappy with their stay are few and far between, but the common complaints that do exist seem to all be noise-related, with some noting you can feel the subway trains go by underneath you, and others citing that rooms just off the atrium experience noise from the bar drifting up to the rooms.
On the entranceway door, there's a quote from Jeff Goodell's 2017 book The Water Will Come: Rising Seas, Sinking Cities, and the Remaking of the Civilized World: A backpacker's campfire throws out a spark, a tree ignites and soon the mountainside is burning and the soot is drifting up, some of it lofted into the Jetstream and settling in Greenland, darkening the snow and accelerating the transformation of ice into water, which runs down into the North Atlantic, and eventually pushes a little deeper into Miami, Shanghai, New York … and then a little deeper still.
On December 8, 1927, the Tashmoo snapped its moorings during a gale and starting drifting up the Detroit River. It collided with a ferry and was found further upstream, stopped by the Belle Isle Bridge. Two tugboats pulled the Tashmoo away from bridge, but the cables broke again and the ship once again headed for the bridge. The ship was away from the bridge before the tugboats were able to get the Tashmoo secured again.
The goal of the pilot is to light the burner at the right interval and for the right duration (a few seconds) to keep the balloon slowly drifting up and down about the desired altitude. An exception is made when flying close to the ground, as in an approach to a landing. Then the burner may be lit for very short bursts at a much higher frequency, thus sacrificing efficiency for accuracy.
Signs all around state that they are under quarantine. Claire kills the rat but in the process, Ray accidentally knocks over one of their lamps, burning a wooden table. Having put out the fire, the family quickly realizes that the smoke produced from the fire is drifting up the air duct, giving away their position to anyone in the area. Later they discover that the smoke has left ash covered all above their shelter hatch, making their hiding place visible.
Andy Lipkis - Founder/President of TreePeople since 1973 TreePeople was founded in Los Angeles in 1973 by the 18-year-old activist Andy Lipkis. Lipkis and a group of other teenagers began planting trees three years prior at summer camp in the San Bernardino Mountains. Lipkis heard that smog from Los Angeles was drifting up to the mountains and killing the forest. He rallied his fellow campers, tore up a parking lot, planted smog-tolerant trees ... and TreePeople was born. Since then, TreePeople staff have gone on to plant more than two million trees in the Los Angeles area and have developed one of the nation’s largest environmental education programs.
Hugh Neilson was a keen player of the bagpipes and the music could be heard at many of the surrounding farms, drifting up from the estate gardens. He was also very fond of curling and as soon as the weather was cold enough he would invite all the locals down for a match and a dram at his curling pond (Hastings 1995). It is believed to have been restored when the house was a hotel, using concrete and tarmac. The Chapeltoun Estate was never very large, incorporating Chapeltoun Mains, High Chapeltoun, the home farm (now Chapelhill House), Chapelburn Cottage, Mosshead of Chapelton Farm, Bogside cottage and Bogflat.
After considering and rejecting a number of plans for landings on the north shore of the river, General James Wolfe and his brigadiers decided in late August to land upriver of the city. Relief of Gibraltar by Earl Howe, 11 October 1782, by Richard Paton The British prepared for their risky deployment upstream. Troops had already been aboard landing ships and drifting up and down the river for several days when on 12 September Wolfe made a final decision on the British landing site, selecting L'Anse-au- Foulon. Wolfe's plan of attack depended on secrecy and surprise — a key element of a successful amphibious operation — a small party of men would land by night on the north shore, climb the tall cliff, seize a small road, and overpower the garrison that protected it, allowing the bulk of his army (5,000 men) to ascend the cliff by the small road and then deploy for battle on the plateau.
If successful, such a landing would force Montcalm to fight, as a British force on the north shore of the St. Lawrence would cut his supply lines to Montreal.. Initial suggestions for landing sites ranged as far as up the St. Lawrence, which would have given the French troops one or two days to prepare for the attack.. Following the failed British assault on Montmorency, Montcalm altered his deployment, sending Bougainville and a column of approximately 1,500 regular troops, 200 cavalry, and a group of New French militia—some 3,000 men in all—upriver to Cap-Rouge to monitor the British ships upstream. He further strengthened his defences of the Beauport shore following the abandonment of the British camp at Montmorency, which he regarded as preparations for a descent (amphibious attack) on Beauport. In spite of warnings from local commanders, he did not view an upstream landing as a serious possibility.. Anse au Foulon The British, meanwhile, prepared for their risky deployment upstream. Troops had already been aboard landing ships and drifting up and down the river for several days.
The fleet began its usual summer cruise to Norway in mid-July. The fleet was present for the birthday of Norwegian King Haakon VII on 3 August. The German ships departed the following day for Helgoland, to join exercises being conducted there. The fleet was back in Kiel by 15 August, where preparations for the autumn maneuvers began. On 22–24 August, the fleet took part in landing exercises in Eckernförde Bay outside Kiel. The maneuvers were paused from 31 August to 3 September when the fleet hosted vessels from Denmark and Sweden, along with a Russian squadron from 3 to 9 September in Kiel. The maneuvers resumed on 8 September and lasted five more days. alt=A large warship at rest, with light gray smoke drifting up from its two smokestacks The ship participated in the uneventful winter cruise into the Kattegat and Skagerrak from 8 to 16 December. The first quarter of 1907 followed the previous pattern and, on 16 February, the Active Battle Fleet was re-designated the High Seas Fleet.

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