Use "mount up" in a sentence

1. Go mount up.

2. 9 Their debts continued to mount up.

3. They will mount up with wings like eagles.

4. Give us the strength to mount up like eagles;

5. First three vehicles mount up, we're moving back to base.

6. 21 It isn't a good idea to let bills mount up.

7. " You can't skip a hundred at first, but if you practice you'll mount up.

8. 6 I am appalled that children can mount up debts unbeknown to their parents.

9. We will mount up with wings like eagles.—2 Corinthians 4:7; Isaiah 40:31.

10. 8 synonyms for Bestride: straddle, stride, climb on, hop on, jump on, mount up, get on, mount

11. Doubtless you too would like to find refuge under the wings of the Most High, to “mount up with wings like eagles.”

12. From Middle English Amounten (“to mount up to, come up to, signify”) Old French amounter (“to amount to”) amunt, amont (“uphill, upward”), prop

13. From Middle English Amounten (“to mount up to, come up to, signify”) Old French amounter (“to amount to”) amunt, amont (“uphill, upward”), prop

14. From Middle English amounten (“to mount up to, come up to, signify”) Old French Amounter (“to amount to”) amunt, amont (“uphill, upward”), prop

15. Bestride - get up on the back of; "mount a horse" climb on , hop on , jump on , mount up , get on , mount move - move so as to change position, perform a nontranslational …

16. 18 For awickedness burneth as the fire; it shall devour the briers and thorns, and shall kindle in the thickets of the forests, and they shall mount up like the lifting up of smoke.

17. Bestride: 1 v get up on the back of Synonyms: climb on , get on , hop on , jump on , mount , mount up Antonyms: get off , hop out get out of quickly Types: remount mount again Type of: move move so as to change position, perform a nontranslational motion

18. From Middle English Amounten ("to mount up to, come up to, signify"), from Old French amonter ("to amount to"), from amont, amunt ("uphill, upward"), from the prepositional phrase a mont ("toward or to a mountain or heap"), from Latin ad montem, from ad ("to") + montem, accusative of mons ("mountain").