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Wrap up   /ræp əp/   Listen
Wrap up

verb
1.
Arrange or fold as a cover or protection.  Synonym: wrap.  "Wrap the present"
2.
Finish a task completely.  Synonyms: clear up, finish off, finish up, get through, mop up, polish off.
3.
Form a cylinder by rolling.  Synonym: roll up.
4.
Clothe, as if for protection from the elements.  Synonym: cover.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Wrap up" Quotes from Famous Books



... apiece under the denomination of card-money. Wit and beauty, indeed, remain in the persons of Lady Townshend and Lady Caroline Fitzroy; but such is the want of taste of this age, that the former is very often forced to wrap up her wit in plain English before it can be understood; and the latter is almost as often obliged to have recourse to the same artifices to make her charms be ...
— The Letters of Horace Walpole, Volume 1 • Horace Walpole

... provided by sending a boy up a tree to bring down four or five fruits, which were laid in the ashes, and cooked at once; and as to banana leaves 'we think nothing of cutting one down, four feet long and twenty inches wide, of a bright pale green, just to wrap up ...
— Life of John Coleridge Patteson • Charlotte M. Yonge

... sixty published every day. How they manage to find paper is to me a mystery. Some of them are printed upon sheets intended for books, others upon sheets which are so thick that I imagine they were designed to wrap up sugar and other groceries. Those which were the strongest in favour of the Empire, are now the strongest in favour of the Republic. Editors and writers whose dream it was a few months ago to obtain an invitation at the Tuileries or to the Palais Royal, or to merit by the basest of flatteries ...
— Diary of the Besieged Resident in Paris • Henry Labouchere

... before he threw his arms around the neck of the big white sheep-dog which had leaped forward as he entered. His mother smiled out of her tired eyes as she gave him his morning portion, and then began to wrap up in a spotless napkin the dry bread and few olives which were to be his lunch in the pasture. When the last bit of hot porridge and the cup of goat's milk had been finished, he kissed her hand, gave the signal to the impatient dog, and ran across the ...
— Roads from Rome • Anne C. E. Allinson

... week after leaving port, I had found it very cold, for it was the winter season when we left home. The cloth, however, after it was discovered, enabled me to wrap up snugly enough, and I no longer cared for the cold. After a time, however, I began to perceive that the cold had quite taken its departure, and each day and night the atmosphere in the hold of the ship appeared ...
— The Boy Tar • Mayne Reid


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