Verb
store up (third-person singular simple present stores up, present participle storing up, simple past and past participle stored up)
(transitive) To build up a supply of (something), usually for use at a particular time in the future, when the time is right.
A five-story residential building structured in laminated timber can store up to 180 kilos of carbon per square meter, three times more than in the above ground biomass of natural forests with high carbon density. Source: Internet
But what Limbaugh said is dangerously untrue, and a persuadable listener could easily conclude there's no need to store up any extra food or anticipate an illness any more serious than a runny nose. Source: Internet
But it won’t get you anywhere, and it will just store up bad karma for you down the line. Source: Internet
Floppy drive Atari initially used single-sided disk drives that could store up to 360 kB. Source: Internet
Auto Backup can store up to 25 MB of file-based data per app. Source: Internet
At the end of the trial you can upgrade to a paid plan or choose the Hacker Plan, which is completely free and lets you store up to 10,000 records. Source: Internet