Examples of 'ticked up' in a sentence

Meaning of "ticked up"

ticked up - a phrase indicating an increase or rise in something, such as prices or statistics

How to use "ticked up" in a sentence

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ticked up
Little black numbers ticked up the side.
In Finland and Greece the unemployment actually ticked up.
All three ticked up a tenth of a point.
Male reporter Violent crime has not ticked up this high.
Poverty also ticked up after declining for two years.
While service orders stagnated, manufacturing orders ticked up.
Violent crime has not ticked up this high.
Every time the tablet connected to a phone, the number ticked up.
Your approval numbers ticked up another two points today.
The new poll shows the president 's popularity ticked up.
Unemployment probably also ticked up because of the government shutdown.
Since then, the number of inhabitants has ticked up slightly.
Violent crime has not ticked up this high … I will be back, buddy.
Right, but he is still wheezing and his temperature has ticked up.
Sales in West ticked up 3 per cent.

See also

Along with the rising incomes in April, spending ticked up as well.
The rate ticked up to 8.2 percent in May with the the economic recovery still sluggish.
Rising PC prices are not the issue, prices have only ticked up a smidgen.
Plus, compliance has actually ticked up a bit recently, with Iraq, in particular, boosting its efforts.
When I didn't pull away, the corners of his mouth ticked up into a semblance of a.
Broward occupancy ticked up by 1 percent compared to the previous year, at 87 percent.
The Nassar raid is a win . Your approval numbers ticked up another two points today.
After 15 consecutive quarters of declining sales volume, sales have ticked up.
As I sat stalled in traffic, the meter ticked up 20 cents at a time.
Boeing shares ticked up 2.5 % by the time she sold her stock about a month later.
The number unemployed 27 weeks or longer ticked up slightly.
AUGUSTA, Maine ( AP ) - Unemployment ticked up very slightly in the state of Maine in September.
China 's yuan has also slid, while its capital outflows have ticked up.
Male reporter Violent crime hasn't ticked up this high… Whimpering.
Slowly, miraculously, she watched as Sutcliffe 's blood pressure ticked up.
For females, it ticked up just 6 percent.
A corner of Harry's mouth ticked up.
The sentiment indicator has ticked up to 6.6, exactly in line with the global average.
The nation's unemployment fee ticked up to 6.
The VIX ticked up slightly to just above 19.
Food prices and housing costs both ticked up 0.2 percent.
Unemployment ticked up to 4 percent after falling to 3.8 percent in May.
Food prices and housing costs both ticked up 0.2 per cent.
Income ticked up 0.1 percent, the weakest reading since August, as wages and salaries fell.
Sales in Europe and the Asia-Pacific region ticked up only 1 %, however.
But the rate has now ticked up to 48 percent, Spinella said.
After Asian shares touched 19-month highs, European bourses ticked up at the open.
Outside China, the manganese alloy market ticked up and prices gradually recovered from July 2013.

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Examples of using Ticked
A lot of employees ticked off at the boss
You ticked off the wrong guy
The alloted time ticked away quickly
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