Synonyms for mount up
verb command a price ofAntonyms for mount up
costed
Word Origin & History
c.1300, "to mount a horse;" mid-14c., "to rise up, ascend; fly," from Old French monter "to go up, ascend, climb, mount," from Vulgar Latin *montare, from Latin mons (genitive montis) "mountain" (see mount (n.)). Meaning "to set or place in position" first recorded 1530s. Sense of "to get up on for purposes of copulation" is from 1590s. Related: Mounted; mounting.
Example Sentences formount up
"Oh, it'll mount up to considerable, as it stands," said Thorpe.
You have nothing to do but to mount up to your seat, and fill in with colours.
There may be time for you all to mount up before the gendarmes appear.
If they tried any of their tricks we could mount up in our ship and escape them, said Andy.
The human voice cannot mount up into these boundless solitudes.
They tried to mount up on the roofs, but the houses fell with them.
The view of Siena behind us gradually expands, as we mount up.
At Tikze we are much lower than at Leh, and then we begin to mount up again.
They mount up to the heaven, they go down again to the depths.
We cannot mount up to the sources from which we derive the ideas that make us what we are.