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crank-up
[krangk-uhp]
noun
an act or instance of cranking up.
crank up
verb
to increase (loudness, output, etc)
he cranked up his pace
to set in motion or invigorate
news editors have to crank up tired reporters
(intr, adverb) to inject a narcotic drug
Word History and Origins
Origin of crank-up1
Idioms and Phrases
Get started, as in The theater season is cranking up with four benefit performances . This expression transfers the literal sense of crank , “operate a motor by turning a crank,” to starting any activity. [ Slang ; 1930s]
Stimulate or intensify one's efforts. For example, We've got to crank up enthusiasm for this new product , or Close to the election the campaign really cranked up . [ Slang ; mid-1900s]
Example Sentences
Borthwick's selections over the campaign have been getting more adventurous, but this was a crank-up of the curveball.
Mr. Cumella, who collects and repairs crank-up phonographs like Victrolas and has a collection of original Nora Bayes records, was hoping to add Ms. Bayes’s grave to a Woodlawn tour he conducts while using a portable antique turntable to play records of jazz and vaudeville greats at their grave sites.
With Kaymer leading by a million shots and Fox taking over the broadcast next year, why not crank-up the zaniness a few notches?
On Sundays, there was ballroom dancing around a crank-up gramophone.
You can grab a seat on the lawn to hear live recitations, along with music from 1900-25 played on period crank-up phonographs by Michael Cumella, a k a MAC, the program’s regular host.
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