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4 Sentences With "got up to mischief"

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

At Carnegie Mellon, he formed a group with other students called "It'll Do Casual Construction" that built sets, put on performances, and generally got up to mischief and shenanigans.
They were regularly allowed to wander freely, when they sometimes got up to mischief on people's land, making the local press. Salt killed one William Aslett in 1937, who was one of her grooms, and may have killed another keeper when she worked on Paulo's Circus. The elephants were known for starting the famous elephant trainer, Ivor Rosaire, on his independent career path as an elephant trainer.
However, the elections had already been announced and no law could be enacted until they were held. The canvassers got up to mischief and there were even murders. The senate decided to introduce the law before the elections and to give the consuls a body-guard. Gaius Cornelius got angry and proposed to the assembly of the people that the senators should not be allowed to grant office to those who sought it in a way not prescribed by law, 'or to usurp the people's right of decision in any other matter.
Her first television role was in March 1957, playing Phyllis in the second BBC adaptation of The Railway Children. Later that year she appeared as Pamela Gwendolyn Stuart in The Adventures of Clint and Mac, a British-made serial commissioned by Walt Disney Studios for The Mickey Mouse Club. Also in 1957 she played Caroline, a modern teenager who got up to mischief in the ITV sitcom The Thompsons.Whirligig - 1950s British Television Nostalgia: Meet The Thompsons (Reproduced from TV Mirror - 23 November 1957) She appeared in a variety of programmes, ranging from the 1959 adaptation of Great Expectations and Dixon of Dock Green (also 1959), to The Ronnie Barker Playhouse (1968) and Gaslight Theatre (1968).

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