Explanation

  • To consume or use the entire supply of something, leaving none left.

Origin

  • Combines use (to employ for a purpose) with up (indicating completion or exhaustion).
  • Up often signifies finishing something completely (e.g., eat up, drink up, finish up).

Alternatives

Slang/Informal:

  • Polish off (finish food or drink completely)
  • Blow through (use resources quickly and often wastefully)
  • Drain (deplete, often energy or finances)

Vulgar/Emphatic (expressing frustration at waste):

  • Who the hell used up all the fucking hot water?

Milder/Formal:

  • Deplete
  • Exhaust the supply of
  • Consume entirely

Situational Appropriateness

  • Neutral.
  • Common in everyday conversation and also acceptable in semi-formal contexts (e.g., discussing project resources). Deplete or exhaust might be preferred in very formal settings.

Misunderstanding Warnings

  • Fairly straightforward. Ensure distinction from just use (employ) use up means use *completely*.
  • Be aware of the figurative meaning (exhausted).
  • # DISCOURSE MARKERS & INTERJECTIONS (Adding Native Flavor)

Examples

  • We used up all the milk, so I need to buy more.
  • Don't use up all the printer paper.
  • The project used up most of our budget.
  • I feel completely used up after that long week. (Figurative: exhausted)

Dialogue

Context

Child: Mom, can I have some cereal?

Mom: I think we used up all the milk this morning, sweetie. Let me check.

(Checks fridge)

Mom: Yep, it's all gone. We'll have to get some more later. You can have toast instead for now.

Child: Okay.

Social Media Examples

  • Tweet: Pretty sure I used up all my social energy for the month this weekend. Need to recharge! #introvertproblems #exhausted
  • Facebook Post: Baking frenzy! I think I used up half my pantry ingredients. Hope everyone enjoys the cookies! #baking #holidaytreats
  • Forum Question: My phone battery seems to use up its charge much faster now. Any tips to improve battery life? #techhelp #smartphone

Response Patterns

  • Annoyance/Complaint: Oh great, now we have none left! / Why did you use it all?
  • Statement of fact: Okay, I'll add it to the shopping list.
  • Instruction/Warning: Okay, I'll be careful. / Try to conserve it.

Common Follow-up Questions/Actions

After something is used up:

  • Plan to replenish: I'll buy more tomorrow. / Can you pick some up?
  • Discuss alternatives: What can we use instead?
  • If figurative (exhaustion): Express sympathy, suggest rest.

Conversation Starter

  • No. Typically used within a conversation about supplies, resources, or energy levels.

Intonation

  • Stress usually falls on USE and UP, and often on the resource being consumed.
  • We USED UP all the MILK. / Don't USE UP the PAper.

Generation Differences

  • Used by all generations.

Regional Variations

  • Common in all major English-speaking regions.
Take off (clothes/airplane/career)