| turn up | If you turn something up or if it turns up, you find, discover, or notice it. Investigations have never turned up any evidence. a very rare 15th-Century spoon, which turned up in an old house in Devon | en |
| turn up | discover the location of; determine the place of; find by searching or examining; "Can you locate your cousins in the Midwest?"; "My search turned up nothing" | en |
| turn up | fold; discover; increase; increase the volume; occur | en |
| turn up | bend or lay so that one part covers the other; "fold up the newspaper"; "turn up your collar" | en |
| turn up | find by digging in the ground; "I dug up an old box in the garden" | en |
| turn up | be shown or be found to be; "She proved to be right"; "The medicine turned out to save her life"; "She turned up HIV positive" | en |
| turn up | appear or become visible; make a showing; "She turned up at the funeral"; "I hope the list key is going to surface again" | en |
| turn up | If you say that someone or something turns up, you mean that they arrive, often unexpectedly or after you have been waiting a long time. Richard had turned up on Christmas Eve with Tony = show up | en |
| turn up | When you turn up a radio, heater, or other piece of equipment, you increase the amount of sound, heat, or power being produced, by adjusting the controls. Bill would turn up the TV in the other room I turned the volume up Turn the heat up high. turn down | en |
| turn-up | The turn-ups on a pair of trousers are the parts which are folded over at the ends of the legs | en |
| turnup | The cuff on a trouser leg that is, or can be turned up | en |
| turnup | The next card taken from the top of a pack of cards and displayed | en |
| turnup | trouser cuff (British); that which turns up; surprise (British colloquial) isim | en |
| turnup | Completing the installation of a circuit and making it available to the customer that requested it | en |
| turnup | the lap consisting of a turned-back hem encircling the end of the sleeve or leg | en |