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20 Sentences With "go upwards"

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

Conventional machines, Frenkel said, start at $20303,000 or $40,000 and go upwards of $100,000.
But while it seemed Charles' career could only go upwards, his channel took a massive hit in May.
"The four factors that we look at are all flashing green for defense spending to go upwards," Higgins said.
The standard king or queen rooms start at $189 in winter and can go upwards of $300 to $400 in summer.
As the report notes, this doesn't put the Tesla semi in direct competition with long-haul fuel-powered rigs; those can go upwards of 1,000 miles on a single tank.
"The size of the Belgium deal shows how the governments themselves view the way in which rates are going to go upwards in the future," said DZ Bank strategist Daniel Lenz.
"The rice is there but it's being stockpiled, traders are storing it as they can see the prices go upwards and they are waiting to sell at the highest price," said one trader, who declined to be identified.
By using more engines, the length of the landing burn could be drastically shortened, resulting in far more efficient propellant usage by minimizing losses to gravity (every second the rocket is trying to go upwards is a second fighting against Earth's gravity, which pulls the rocket down at ~9.8 meters/second squared).
In the spring, during the breeding season, the birds feed mainly on arthropods. In May 1884 when Whitehead opened the gizzards of birds that he had shot, he found that they contained small beetles and other insects. It has the ability, like other nuthatches, to climb down trees, unlike species such as woodpeckers which can only go upwards, and will also flycatch.
The Upanishad states that Rudra is resident in the soul in the heart. In chapter 4, the text offers mystical explanations to why Rudra is described the way he is. He is called Om, states the text, because when uttered he makes Prana go upwards. He is called the holy call because he is the essence of all the Vedas.
After 2 or 3 days of fasting, the liver begins to synthesize ketone bodies from precursors obtained from fatty acid breakdown. The brain uses these ketone bodies as fuel, thus cutting its requirement for glucose. After fasting for 3 days, the brain gets 30% of its energy from ketone bodies. After 4 days, this may go upwards to 70% or more.
Bids were floated for by the FDCM for Investments, but no serious bidder came in. The FDCM has now started on its own by funding itself for the Indian Safari. The cost estimates are likely to go upwards with the delay in execution of the project. The Forest Advisory Committee (FAC) of the MoEFCC granted Stage II forest clearance (564 hectares).
It feeds on insects and seeds, and seeds are also stored in food caches. It has the ability, like other nuthatches, to climb down trees, unlike species such as woodpeckers which can only go upwards, but does not flycatch. The Algerian nuthatch is 13.5 cm long, slightly smaller than the Eurasian nuthatch, and has the typical nuthatch big head, short tail and powerful bill and feet. It is blue-grey above, and buff below.
Andre Alves became top-scorer and champion in 2010 Győr-Videoton in 2004 This was the beginning of a period for the club, which saw them go upwards and develop. After winning the Second Division and gaining promotion in 2000, the teamed once again reached the cup final in 2001, losing 5–2 to Debrecen. This led to the team's only participation in the Intertoto Cup, where they were defeated by Marek Dupnitsa in the first round. In 2005, the club changed its name to FC Fehérvar.
Diplomatic relations with France were established on 18 January 1879. Rapid development of bilateral relations done that people in Serbia in "mighty France" seen great new friend that will protect them from the Ottomans and Habsburgs. Relations between Serbia and France would go upwards until the First World War, when the "common struggle" against a common enemy would reach its peak. Before the war, France would win sympathy of local population by building railways by opening of French schools and a consulate and a Bank.
These are being confused with lute sterns but as a lute is not watertight, a better term is needed. Chappelle in American Small Sailing Craft refers to a Bermudan boat with this form of counter, using the term "square tuck stern" to describe it. The term "tuck" is used in the northwest of England for this area of the hull at the sternpost, and for the bulkhead across the counter if one is fitted. The fantail stern describes a stern that starts at the water and widens as you go upwards.
This makes the "clicking" sound and allows the train to go upwards only, effectively preventing the train from rolling back down the hill should it ever encounter a power failure or broken chain. This feature was derived from the similar feature originally used on the Mauch Chunk Switchback Railway in Pennsylvania, starting in 1846. The two uphill planes that cars were drawn up under the power of a stationary steam engine had two slightly different early forms of this anti-rollback device. The entire concept of the modern roller coaster was also initially inspired by this railroad.
Illuminated fountain The book The Theory and Practice of Gardening by Dezallier d'Argenville (1709) showed different types of fountain nozzles which would create different shapes of water, from bouquets to fans. From Roman times until the end of the 19th century, fountains operated by gravity, requiring a source of water higher than the fountain itself to make the water flow. The greater the difference between the elevation of the source of water and the fountain, the higher the water would go upwards from the fountain. In Roman cities, water for fountains came from lakes and rivers and springs in the hills, brought into city in aqueducts and then distributed to fountains through a system of lead pipes.
Nacube is a village on the island of Samar, Eastern Visayas, The Philippines. Nacube is a word from a road construction company from which local people learned the term. Nacube is from the old original word of "curve", a geodetical surveying term, in local dialect it is also called "Naliku" or "Nacurve", in this stretch of the highway you can encounter a strange curve which is so lengthy and lies on a soft foundation of soil, the curve is retained on the side to prevent erosion and lower foundation soil from sliding to the sides and go upwards preventing the highway curve from giving way of sinking. The curve is located at kilometer post or monument 757 from reference point Zero in Luneta or the Ped Xing.
Bangladeshi immigration to Brazil is a new trend, as the South American country has no tradition of receiving the Bengali people. Most of the countries declare them as "refugees", although for the first time, Bengalis started to arrive in Brazil in the late 2000s and the migratory wave started to go upwards in the early 2010s. One of the reasons for choosing Brazil as a new home for these immigrants is their vision of the country being 'welcoming and full of opportunities', which they do not find in their home country, beyond the poverty, political and religious persecution in Bangladesh. Some immigrants have been victims of exploitation being deceived by international human trafficking, but those who work legally in the country tend to be employed in factories where halal slaughter (a type of meat preparation that follows Islamic precepts) is required.

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