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27 Sentences With "gave it up for"

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

We gave it up for him in the locker room, that's for sure.
But, it was still amazing and dope how he gave it up for Lowry, you gotta see it.
Eventually, after two of his friends and fellow-dealers were shot and killed, he gave it up for good.
He wasn't very good at being a living statue, he said, and gave it up for a while to travel.
When it was over the crowd gave it up for the special guest appearance ... and went wild for the stage smooch.
The mayor had attempted a run for the Democratic nomination for governor of Pennsylvania in 2014 but gave it up for lack of funds.
When she married Dean Bragonier, a former restaurateur who now runs a nonprofit that promotes dyslexia curriculums in middle school — Ms. Taylor, Mr. Bragonier and Ms. Simon are all dyslexic — she gave it up for good.
There's a funny and rich episode in which Jim is wrestling with his calling in life and is ashamed to learn that Father Nicholas was a soccer star and model yet gave it up for the priesthood.
Patrick: Yeah, I did pyromancy with a hand axe, and eventually I gave it up for some big ass sword towards the end of the game but I had the hand axe for a long fucking time in that game.
You use it and then I gave it up for a while and now it seems like as good a time I've ever to pick up a little bit of meditation again and Headspace, like many other apps right now they're offering more free content, right?
I find marijuana ... and again, I find marijuana is a great way to relieve stress in moderation, and I'm a big ... I smoked a lot of pot in college, and I gave it up for 30 years, and I've found as I get older, and I don't want to drink as much alcohol because I literally can't handle alcohol now.
James had a brother named John Morgan Pryse (Sept. 9, 1863 - Sept. 5, 1952) who died in Los Angeles and who was also a publisher and writer on esoteric subjects. James began his career in law, but gave it up for journalism.
He was an editor of the Transactions of the American Entomological Society from 1917 to 1924. His son John William Holman Rehn was briefly interested in entomology and published some papers with his father but gave it up for a career in the US Army.
Beerbaum was born in Detmold, Germany. In school, he took Business Studies, but eventually gave it up for a career in show jumping. Beerbaum began riding on a Highland Pony at the age of 8. He had a very successful career as a young Rider which continued into his adulthood.
Gardiner also supported himself by portrait-painting, but gave it up for the stage, both as scene-painter and actor. He eventually worked for a Mrs. Beetham, who also made profile shadow-portraits. Meeting Francis Grose the antiquary, he was placed by him with Richard Godfrey, the engraver of the Antiquarian Repertory.
Ailsa later tells Colleen she knew it was her fault all along, before she dies. Colleen later reveals she had a child out of wedlock and gave it up for adoption. Max Sutherland (Sebastian Elmaloglou) later uses Colleen's bank account to store money in from his book proceeds. Colleen has legal action taken against her over the books copyright status, she covers for Max.
The British abandoned the city in June 1778, and the house became headquarters for Military Governor Benedict Arnold. Philadelphia served as the temporary national capital from 1790 to 1800, while Washington, D.C. was under construction. The house was owned by revolutionary war financier Robert Morris in 1790, who gave it up for President Washington's use. Washington brought nine enslaved Africans from Mount Vernon to work in his presidential household.
Born in Brighton, Sussex, and educated at Varndean Grammar School (now Varndean College), Ovett was a talented teenage athlete. As a youngster, he showed great promise as a footballer, but gave it up for athletics, because he did not want to play a sport where he would have to rely on teammates. As a youngster he won the under-15 (Junior boys) English Schools' Athletics Championships title at 400 metres in 1970 and the under-17 (Intermediate boys) 800 metres title in 1972.
He took his M.D. in Dublin and practised medicine > for a couple of years, but gave it up for travel, study, and literary work. > He was Professor of English Literature at Alexandra-College, Dublin, from > 1870 to 1874. He then made his permanent home in London, where his house > became a resort for artists and men of letters. During recent years informal > "symposia" were held there about once a fortnight, when friends gathered at > his fireside to discuss poetry and philosophy.
Much to Pete's surprise, she lives with her mother, but that doesn't stop them from sleeping together. During the Season 2 finale, when everyone in the office has left for the day, Pete asks Peggy to come sit down with him. Pete tells Peggy he thinks she is "perfect", and then confesses that he is in love with her and wishes he had married her. This declaration prompts Peggy to finally admit that she had his baby and gave it up for adoption two years before.
In 1897 Wright was awarded a Stuart prize for poetry. Wright published four volumes of ballads, Aorangi and other Verses (1896), Station Ballads and other Verses (1897), Wisps of Tussock (1900), and New Zealand Chimes (1900). As a clergyman Wright was liked, but he found the work uncongenial and gave it up for journalism in which he had considerable experience in New Zealand. Wright married Elizabeth Couper at Dunedin on 3 August 1899; a son David was born in 1900, but the marriage failed.
Link studied at the Wharton School of Business but was already publishing songs by his late teens; in 1914, he co-wrote "Along Came Ruth" with Irving Berlin. He attempted a career in acting, appearing in the 1916 film The Masked Rider, but had little luck and soon gave it up for a sustained career in music publishing. In 1929, he co-wrote "I've Got a Feeling I'm Falling" with Billy Rose and Fats Waller. Waller turned the song into a hit; Louis Armstrong recorded the tune, as did many others.
Their marriage was portrayed as a very strong one throughout the series. During season 5, it was revealed that, before meeting Katherine, Dr. Auschlander had a child with a former flame, Margaret (Geraldine Fitzgerald), who gave it up for adoption and never told him. In season 6, Auschlander finally met his son (Lawrence Pressman) who decided it would be best not to stay in contact. Auschlander was on the verge of facilitating a deal in which the Boston diocese would buy back the hospital and bring Dr. Westphall back as administrator.
Barclay began playing Australian football at the age of twelve, although she gave it up for a period in order to concentrate on baseball."Emeralds star taking Giant steps forward", Baseball Australia Media, 13 October 2016. Retrieved 18 February 2017. At amateur level, she played for periods with in the West Australian Women's Football League (WAWFL) and the UNSW Eastern Suburbs Stingrays in the Sydney Women's AFL competition."Women's AFL Draft: 11 Swan Districts players recruited for inaugural season", Eastern Reporter, 17 October 2016. Retrieved 18 February 2017.
Di Giacomo was born in Naples. He studied medicine briefly, largely to satisfy his father's wishes, but gave it up for the life of a poet. He then founded a literary journal, Il Fantasio, in 1880, and, like many young writers, had a varied apprenticeship, working in a print shop, as a journalist and publishing some of his early verse in the Neapolitan daily, il Mattino. He even wrote a series of youthful stories à la E. T. A. Hoffmann and Edgar Allan Poe set in an imaginary German town inhabited by sinister students and mad doctors.
Rowland with his dividing machine Rowland was born in Honesdale, Pennsylvania, where his father Henry Augustus Rowland was the Presbyterian pastor of a local church. From an early age he exhibited marked scientific tastes and spent all his spare time in electrical and chemical experiments. At the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute at Troy, N.Y. he graduated in 1870, and he then obtained an engagement on the Western New York railway. But the work there was not to his liking, and after a short time he gave it up for an instructorship in natural science at the University of Wooster, Ohio, which in turn he resigned in order to return to Troy as assistant professor of physics.
Writer Herman Melville mentioned Sag Harbor in his novel Moby Dick. > Arrived at last in old Sag Harbor; and seeing what the sailors did there; > and then going on to Nantucket, and seeing how they spent their wages in > that place also, poor Queequeg gave it up for lost. Thought he, it's a > wicked world in all meridians; I'll die a pagan. Historic buildings from this period include the Old Whaler's Church, a Presbyterian church that sported a steeple. When the church opened in 1843, the steeple made it the tallest structure on Long Island.Oliver Peterson, "Push is on to rebuild church steeple", East Hampton Press, June 13, 2007 The steeple collapsed during the Great Hurricane of 1938.

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