I don't see the difference as long as you are talking about lifting an object physically higher from the floor or ground. But 'hold up' can have the meaning of robbing or robbery. "I'll hold up the first person who comes out of the bank!" a robber might say. Or, "This is a hold up!"
posess, own, hold,
Hi: Hold the hands as if you are carrying something, them move them in 2-3 little arcs from right to left. In BSL (British Sign Language) The sign is depicted as if you are carrying a wide box in both hand and you lift the hands up and down as if lifting.
Got held up.
Hold on can be an idiom meaning 'wait a moment', or 'stop'. Assuming that it is:Hold on, I'm about to finish my assignment!Wait, hold on for a second- I just got an e-mail.Assuming that you literally mean 'hold on':Hold on, I won't let you fall!
The word "bracket" can be a noun or a verb. As a noun, it refers to a support or frame attached to a wall to hold up a shelf, while as a verb, it means to support or enclose something within brackets.
something to hold up books
The word is clutch. Note that this is a verb and a noun at the same time.
Hold down Alt and type OOF at the same time. If you do it on the Internet, it comes up with something different, so it works on Microsoft apps.
"Displaying" is to present or hold up to view. It involves showing something to others for observation or examination.
a sponge
Hold your nose and blow
A sponge is an example of something that soaks up water. Its porous texture allows it to absorb and hold liquid.
No not really. Something's capacity is the total that something can possibly hold. However the amount you put in can be only half this capacity.
thesonising repressing inhibiting bottling up stifling
All hold something up😀
A belt or braces (suspenders in American).
Exactly what it says - you do know how to hold something.