List of synonyms from "kept pace with" to synonyms from "kept up on"
Discover all the synonyms available for the terms kept quiet, kept to oneself, kept under one thumb, kept shoulder the wheel, kept time with, kept toes and many more. Click on one of the words below and go directly to the synonyms associated with it.
- Kept pace with
- Kept posted
- Kept promise
- Kept quiet
- Kept safe
- Kept secret
- Kept shoulder the wheel
- Kept shoulder to the wheel
- Kept shoulder to wheel
- Kept shoulder wheel
- Kept steady pace
- Kept tabs on
- Kept time with
- Kept to oneself
- Kept toes
- Kept touch
- Kept track of
- Kept truckin'
- Kept truckin
- Kept under one's thumb
- Kept under one thumb
- Kept under wraps
- Kept up
- Kept up on
Definition of the day : « kept up »
- verb maintain, sustain
- She kept up a running accompaniment of small talk to the music.
- Extract from : « K » by Mary Roberts Rinehart
- The English and the French kept up a conversation with these sugar-plums.
- Extract from : « The Boy Life of Napoleon » by Eugenie Foa
- He kept up this accelerated pace to the door of his private room.
- Extract from : « The Secret Agent » by Joseph Conrad
- She had kept up a correspondence with her father during his life.
- Extract from : « Night and Morning, Complete » by Edward Bulwer-Lytton
- Though ill and poor at this period, he kept up his self-confidence.
- Extract from : « Heroes of the Telegraph » by J. Munro
- The thunder was not loud, but it kept up a continuous muttering and rumbling.
- Extract from : « The Rock of Chickamauga » by Joseph A. Altsheler
- He kept up the habit which he had learned from a sailor friend.
- Extract from : « Welsh Fairy Tales » by William Elliott Griffis
- No doubt there's a certain form to be kept up that it's for something else, but it's only a form.
- Extract from : « Little Dorrit » by Charles Dickens
- Although Buel kept up his end of the conversation with Brant, his mind was not on it.
- Extract from : « One Day's Courtship » by Robert Barr
- The old establishment, the old ways, have been kept up—nothing more.
- Extract from : « The Coryston Family » by Mrs. Humphry Ward
