0 past simple and past participle of clock --
1 to take a particular time exactly to do or complete something: --
2 to show or reach a particular speed or distance on a measuring device: --
3 to hit someone, especially on the head or face: --
In 1991, a total of 469,620 tourist nights were clocked up, and £9·457 million was spent.
The trading standards officer could not demonstrate that the vendor had sold the car knowing it to be clocked and was guilty of an offence.
I belong to the small but shamefaced club whose members are people who have bought clocked cars.
Printers clocked in using fictitious names, so that they could double-charge on social security.
They have clocked-in and got away with their money without doing the work for which they were being paid.
I would not trust a word of what her "freebie" states as regards how one tells whether a speedo has been clocked.
Now he has now clocked up a total of £10.7 billion.
In 1978–79 it carried nearly 16 million passengers and clocked up 36,000 million revenue passenger kilometres.