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All stack up synonyms

stack up
S s

verb stack up

  • make a killing — If you make a killing, you make a large profit very quickly and easily.
  • massed — a body of coherent matter, usually of indefinite shape and often of considerable size: a mass of dough.
  • footed — having a foot or feet (often used in combination): a four-footed animal.
  • close with — to engage in battle with an enemy
  • forgather — to gather together; convene; assemble.
  • mass — the celebration of the Eucharist. Compare High Mass, Low Mass.
  • hang out — to fasten or attach (a thing) so that it is supported only from above or at a point near its own top; suspend.
  • make the scene — the place where some action or event occurs: He returned to the scene of the murder.
  • gather — to bring together into one group, collection, or place: to gather firewood; to gather the troops.
  • load up — charge, fill
  • massing — a body of coherent matter, usually of indefinite shape and often of considerable size: a mass of dough.
  • agglomerated — gathered together into a cluster or mass.
  • move up — to pass from one place or position to another.
  • accumulate — When you accumulate things or when they accumulate, they collect or are gathered over a period of time.
  • experimentalize — (transitive) To make experiments upon.
  • gang up — an act of ganging up or uniting in opposition to someone or something.
  • clean up — If you clean up a mess or clean up a place where there is a mess, you make things tidy and free of dirt again.
  • intensate — (transitive) To intensify.
  • go through the roof — the external upper covering of a house or other building.
  • forgathered — Simple past tense and past participle of forgather.
  • agglomerate — to form or be formed into a mass or cluster; collect
  • foot — (in vertebrates) the terminal part of the leg, below the ankle joint, on which the body stands and moves.
  • go up — to move or proceed, especially to or from something: They're going by bus.
  • come to — When someone who is unconscious comes to, they recover consciousness.
  • draw in — to cause to move in a particular direction by or as if by a pulling force; pull; drag (often followed by along, away, in, out, or off).
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