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"keep of" is not a correct or usable expression in written English
The correct phrase is "keep off," which is used to indicate that someone should not go near or touch something. Example: Keep off the grass, please.
Exact(57)
I'd like something to keep of my beloved Celtic.
So Cusack chose what to keep of Catholicism, "I like that some of it has stayed with me.
But then, the other side of it is, the more you keep of that friendship with you, so I am grateful for that," he says, somewhat obscurely.
The study compared people's estimates for how much time they spent working against a time diary they were asked to keep of all their activities.
Without necessarily ever having been found to have committed a crime, you're put on a secret list that the police keep of people who pose a "risk".
Before the sale was completed, Mr. Rose produced one further memento to keep of the DB5 he was selling; he parked it alongside the "Goldfinger" DB5 and snapped a few pictures.
Before photography and recordings provided more vivid permanent traces of family members, she said, a lock of hair was "the one thing you could keep of them close to your heart".
It also said something about the control he wanted to keep of the news cycle flowing with this story, and I can't believe he thought he'd get away with it".
My face inches from his face neither frowning nor smiling nor susceptible any longer to any expression but this watch, this regard; whatever it is I might keep of any of that eludes me.
Similar(2)
The wealth amassed by the previous ruler went to his household and for the up-keep of his mummy.
Once up-keep of seawalls stops, nature begins to shape the marsh again (lower right).' This photo received an honourable mention in the competition.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com