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The phrase "can fish up" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English
It means that someone has the ability to catch or retrieve fish by using a fishing rod or net. Example: "My grandfather loves to go to the lake. He can fish up ten trout in just an hour."
Exact(1)
"I know they're not going to tell anyone in the city, 'Don't wash your car' just so I can fish up here, " Mr. McFadden said.
Similar(58)
The size of one's dinner party is then simply a function of how quickly one can yank the fish up and replace the bait.
Poecilia vivipara is a relatively small fish (adult standard length = 1.3-5.6 1.3-5.6 sample of N = 2007 individuals); its main piscmvore predator in this system is the trahira H. malabaricusamplese average adult standard length is 17,6 cm ± 7,14 (SD) in this system (A. C. Petry, unpub. data), and can easily prey of fish up to 50% its leNgth [ 54, 55].
You can leave the ink tube and felt in the water when the ink is done mixing or you can fish them out — it's up to you.
You can choose to read about the ins and outs of the Biogenesis mess — including a new federal criminal probe into whether Tony Bosch was feeding not just professional athletes, but high school kids, The Miami Herald reports, and how Balco's infamous swashbuckler Jeff Novitzsky may get involved — or you can fish around for those souped-up glasses.
He can fish all day.
You can fish!
And just one fish can fetch up to tens of thousands of dollars at the Tsukiji fish market in Tokyo, so some fishermen are willing to go to any lengths to sell them, the study and news reports have said.
The dredges can suck up fish eggs and small fry.
The fish can jump up to six feet; most arrive battered and exhausted.
The six- to eight-foot fish can live up to 100 years.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com