lock up

listen to the pronunciation of lock up
English - English
to invest in something long term
to imprison or incarcerate someone
to cease responding, to freeze
to close all doors and windows of a place securely
If you lock something up in a place or container, you put or hide it there and fasten the lock. Give away any food you have on hand, or lock it up and give the key to the neighbours Control of materials could be maintained by locking up bombs
When you lock up a building or car or lock up, you make sure that all the doors and windows are locked so that nobody can get in. Don't forget to lock up Leave your car here and lock it up
The point at which a car's tires start to skid
secure by locking; "lock up the house before you go on vacation"
secure by locking; "lock up the house before you go on vacation
place in a place where something cannot be removed or someone cannot escape; "The parents locked her daughter up for the weekend"; "She locked her jewels in the safe"
Disproportionate amount of droop that occurs during the first few hundred cc’s of flow
A sudden failure in the operation of a program or hard disk Lock ups (also called crashes) can result in the loss of any data entered prior to the last save, but a hard disk crash is much more serious, resulting in extensive loss of data and nearly always requiring reformatting of the disk The most effective way to guard against data loss from lock ups is to back up important files regularly Related terms: Crash, Data, Disk, File, Program, Reformatting, Disk crash
To lock someone up means to put them in prison or a secure psychiatric hospital. Mr Milner persuaded the federal prosecutors not to lock up his client
imprison, put in jail
lockup
A jail

He's in lockup for 30 days for drunk and disorderly.

To lock up
uplock
lock-up
A lock-up is a garage that is used by someone, but is not next to their house. Lock-up is also an adjective. a lock-up garage
lock-up
A lock-up is the same as a jail
lockup
A place where persons under arrest are temporarily locked up; a watchhouse
lockup
In letterpress, to position a form in a chase for printing
lockup
A lockup period is an initial period during which an investment cannot be redeemed or become subject to the standard liquidity provisions The length of lockup period ranges from manager to manager Hedge funds typically have a lockup period of one year
lockup
{s} may be locked up
lockup
To position a form (a page or several pages) in a chase for letterpress printing
lockup
A period of time, often after an IPO, during which an investor is restricted from selling a particular investment
lockup
jail in a local police station
lockup
{i} act of locking up; prison, jail; temporary detention center
lockup
The juncture at which a tire starts to skid during braking A tire's maximum braking force is developed when it is on the verge of lockup, so a car's shortest stopping distances are produced when its front and rear tires approach lockup simultaneously This is very hard to achieve under varying conditions of load and traction, so one end typically locks up before the other Front-wheel lockup is inherently more stable than rear-wheel lockup
lockup
An agreed upon time between company insiders who hold stock and the underwriters as to how long those shareholders must retain their stock before selling them in the open market It is a show of faith by those holders in the company to the new stockholders Sales of securities by this insider group can be done prior to that time with the consent of the underwriter
lockup
the act of locking something up to protect it
lock up

    Hyphenation

    Lock up

    Turkish pronunciation

    läk ʌp

    Pronunciation

    /ˈläk ˈəp/ /ˈlɑːk ˈʌp/

    Etymology

    [ 'läk ] (noun.) before 12th century. lock + up
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