knive up
English
Verb
knive up (third-person singular simple present knives up, present participle kniving up, simple past and past participle knived up)
- Alternative form of knife up.
- 1912 October 5, “Four Kinds of Pie. (From the Swanton Courier.)”, in Burlington Daily Free Press, volume 78, number 240, Burlington, Vt., →ISSN, →OCLC, page 4, column 5:
- The gentleman with a concave front and a large watch chain inquired of the kittinish[sic] old lady at the pie counter at the railroad station, “what kind of pie do you serve here?” “All four kinds,” she replied with smiling disdain. “What are they?” “Open faced, cross bar, knived up and the kind mother used to make.”
- 1951 September 22, UP [United Press], “Allied Forces Seize Crest of Key Hill”, in Muskogee Daily Phoenix, city edition, volume XLX, number 262, Muskogee, Okla., →OCLC, page 2, column 4:
- One task force knived up the northwest side of the Iron Triangle, broke through Red defenses, and destroyed several enemy tanks.
- 1959, “The Year Is Eight Months Long”, in Brian Riordan Bremner, editor, The Musketeer, Cincinnati, Oh.: Xavier University, →OCLC, page 75, column 2:
- And it was still snowing, but here and there jonquils knived up.
- 1978, Albert D. Werder, “Bo Mitchell”, in A Spartan Education, Brooklyn Heights, N.Y.: Beekman Publishers, →ISBN, page 124:
- Rodriguez’s sister gets raped and knived up the way we had cut up the other gang. She was stabbed all over the head and chest.
- 1985, Manfred Ambrosius, “The Philosopher’s Tale”, in Jane Turner, Bob Jardine, Pioneer Tales: A New Life in Milton Keynes, Milton Keynes, Buckinghamshire: People’s Press of Milton Keynes, →ISBN, page 6, column 2:
- I came down from London six years ago. That was an idea knived up with a friend of mine and his missus and my girlfriend at the time. It was like — we didn’t even know anything about the place — just a load of houses. We were living in a one bedroom thing in London — stick your feet out of bed and you’re in the oven!
- 1994, June Francis, chapter 21, in Lily’s War, London: Judy Piatkus (Publishers), →ISBN, page 292:
- Men could be blown apart or knived up to the last minute in a war or die of tropical diseases far from medical help.
- 2002, DeSales Harrison, “Scarecrow in Cabbage Patch”, in James Naiden, editor, The North Stone Review, number 14, Minneapolis, Minn., →ISBN, →ISSN, page 65:
- Seed splitter, I knived up through blackness to empty the day from my head – see how it scatters, a million zygote angels seeding the furrows to become these cabbages, lace-bonnet babies with skull-breaking brains, their urchin-orificed heads of flame burn like swamp gas.
- 2007 September 30, Thomas St. Myer, “This Week’s Elite Eight”, in The Star Press, volume 108, number 182, Muncie, Ind.: Gannett, →OCLC, page 11B, column 3:
- Cardinals QB Kurt Warner knived up the Ravens’ defense, never a good sign seeing how Baltimore relies almost solely on defense and special teams to win games.
- 2010, Brendan Cleary, “The Screamers”, in Goin’ Down Slow: Selected Poems 1985-2010, [London]: tall-lighthouse, →ISBN, page 121:
- […] I can remember The Screamers in unison running over the old station bridge chanting ‘The Boys are back in Town’ en route to the Offy but then The Heavy Squad weighed in knived-up even that Postman who collected Elvis records & had every one of his 45’s but 2 copies one in a sealed plastic cover & one to play & he was grimacing & waving a hammer the night The Screamers fucked off & folk sang ‘50p for anyone who misses them’