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  1. to delay someone or something: Traffic was held up for several hours by the accident. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. (STEAL) to steal from someone using violence or the threat of violence: They held the same bank up twice in one week.

  2. Synonyms for HELD UP: postponed, delayed, deferred, laid over, held over, held off (on), put off, put over; Antonyms of HELD UP: worked (on), decided (upon), dealt (with), did, acted, wrought (on), kept (on), carried on.

  3. If you hold someone up, or if you hold up something such as their behaviour, you make their behaviour known to other people, so that they can criticize or praise it. She said the picture that had appeared in a Sunday newspaper had held her up to ridicule.

  4. : to continue in the same condition without failing or losing effectiveness or force. she's holding up under the strain. music that holds up twenty years later. Synonyms. Noun.

  5. Find 5 different ways to say HELD UP, along with antonyms, related words, and example sentences at Thesaurus.com.

  6. to use or present somebody/something as an example. She's always holding up her children as models of good behaviour. His ideas were held up to ridicule. hold up something. to steal from a bank, shop, etc. using a gun. Masked men held up a security van in South London yesterday. related noun hold-up.

  7. ˈhold-up noun [countable] 1 a situation that stops something from happening or making progress SYN delay traffic hold-ups on the highway Despite the odd hold-up, we finished on time. 2 informal an attempt to rob a place or person by threatening them with a weapon SYN robbery a bank hold-up → hold up1 Examples from the Corpus hold-up • It came ab...

  8. Merriam-Webster unabridged. Synonyms for HOLD UP: postpone, delay, defer, put over, put off, hold off (on), hold over, lay over; Antonyms of HOLD UP: work (on), do, deal (with), act, decide (upon), keep (on), carry on, run on.

  9. Sep 27, 2024 · hold up (third-person singular simple present holds up, present participle holding up, simple past and past participle held up) (intransitive, informal) To wait or delay. Synonyms: hold on, hang on

  10. 1 to support someone or something and stop them from falling. 2 to delay or block the movement or progress of someone or something An accident is holding up traffic. related noun holdup. 3 to use or present someone or something as an example She's always holding up her children as models of good behavior. His ideas were held up to ridicule.