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12 Sentences With "stumps up"

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

And the bill stumps up $182bn over a decade which states could use to subsidise the exchanges.
Now he is threatening to trigger a partial government shutdown on December 7th unless Congress stumps up for his pet project.
PFI contracts run for up to 30 years, during which time the government repays a firm that stumps up the cash for the project.
Batuu, an Earth-like destination on the — you guessed it — galaxy's edge, filled with giant stone formations that look like petrified tree stumps up to 135 feet tall.
Whatever the rules, the reality is that a small coterie of private businesses stumps up most of the campaign cash almost everywhere, except perhaps in Uruguay and Costa Rica.
They previously said that visitors to the land will be making a trip to Batuu, an Earth-like destination on the galaxy's edge that's filled with giant stone formations that look like petrified tree stumps up to 135 feet tall.
"The Queen will urge Britain to overcome 'deeply held differences' as she sits near a golden piano that would feed and take the homeless off the streets for a year, a carriage clock that would fund a nurse for a year, all while Joe Public stumps up £360million to fix her castles," one user tweeted.
Other trees far larger than living kauri have been noted in other areas. Rumors of stumps up to 6 metres are sometimes suggested in areas such as the Billygoat Track above the Kauaeranga Valley near Thames. However, there is no good evidence for these (e.g., a documented measurement or a photograph with a person for scale).
The land on which it stood was used to build the Mill Close housing estate in 1977. The former school premises became a village hall in 1987. The Post Office closed down in the mid-1990s. The former England cricketer Ian Botham has lived in the village since 1990, and in 2020 became Lord Botham of Ravensworth.The Northern Echo 25 November 2011 Friday Beefy's son stumps up reward for pet, p3 His 17th century farmhouse situated on a 30-acre estate is his "most treasured possession" and Botham has commented that, "we like our Yorkshire home too much ever to leave it".
A scoop shot (also known as a ramp shot, paddle scoop, Marillier shot or Dilscoop) has been used by a number of first-class players, the first being Dougie Marillier. It is played to short-pitched straight balls that would traditionally be defended or, more aggressively, pulled to the leg side. To play a scoop shot, the batting player is on the front foot and aims to get beneath the bounce of the ball and hit it directly behind the stumps, up and over the wicket-keeper. This shot, though risky in the execution, has the advantage of being aimed at a section of the field where a fielder is rarely placed – particularly in Twenty20 and One Day International cricket where the number of outfielders is limited.
Home to some of the county's highest earners,Surrey Press & Herald "Elmbridge Stumps up £1Bn Annual Income Tax" Claire French, 20 May 2013 Elmbridge is known for its varied landscapes, large average garden size, proximity to London (parts of the borough lie closer to Charing Cross than many outlying areas of Greater London) with the borough forming part of the Greater London built-up area, and an assortment of very large homes (mansions), especially in southern and western parts of the borough, such as Cobham, Oxshott, Weybridge and Esher. This area has been labelled England's Beverly Hills by sections of the press. Famous residents, past and present, include Sir Cliff Richard, Mick Jagger, George Harrison, John Lennon, Ringo Starr, Ronnie Wood, Andy Murray, Kate Winslet, John Terry, Gary Lineker, Mick Hucknall, Frank Lampard, Didier Drogba, Theo Paphitis, Chris Tarrant, Peter Crouch, Michael Aspel and Shilpa Shetty. Somewhat ironically St George's Hill, Weybridge, now a private estate for the very wealthy, was famously the site of one of the earliest experiments in common ownership of land by ordinary people.
In 2004, the BBC apologised unreservedly and paid £250 in compensation to a Somerset parish council, after Clarkson damaged a 30-year-old horse-chestnut tree by driving into it to test the strength of a Toyota Hilux.BBC News – BBC stumps up for tree stunt, 21 February 2004 In December 2006, the BBC complaints department upheld the complaint of four Top Gear viewers that Clarkson had used the phrase "ginger beer" (rhyming slang for "queer") in a derogatory manner, when Clarkson picked up on and agreed with an audience member's description of the Daihatsu Copen as being a bit "gay". The Top Gear: Polar Special was criticised by the BBC Trust for glamorising drink driving in a scene showing Clarkson and James May in a vehicle, despite Clarkson saying to the camera, "And please do not write to us about drinking and driving, because I am not driving I am sailing" (as they were on top of international, frozen waters).BBC News Top Gear rapped for alcohol use, 2 July 2008 They stated the scene "was not editorially justified" despite occurring outside the jurisdiction of any drink-driving laws.

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