From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishmeet up phrasal verb1 MEETto meet someone in order to do something together We often meet up after work and go for a drink. with I’ve got to go now, but I’ll meet up with you later.2 JOIN something TOGETHERif roads, paths etc meet up, they join together at a particular place with The path eventually meets up with the main road. → meet→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
meet with• I and my friend Lenny met up with excited anticipation.• He could tell by the way other Arabs glanced when they met up with his Arabs.• Leaving Googol to safeguard their equipment, he had hurried with Grimm to the station to meet up with Meh'Lindi.• I was delighted you met up with over half term.• Healthy proteins, which have not met up with prions, reside quietly in the membranes of nerve cells in the brain.• Here we met up with the East Team.• Sailing from Southampton on June 4 1994, she will meet up with the official flotilla at sea on the following day.meet with• I and my friend Lenny met up with excited anticipation.• He could tell by the way other Arabs glanced when they met up with his Arabs.• Leaving Googol to safeguard their equipment, he had hurried with Grimm to the station to meet up with Meh'Lindi.• I was delighted you met up with over half term.• Healthy proteins, which have not met up with prions, reside quietly in the membranes of nerve cells in the brain.• Sailing from Southampton on June 4 1994, she will meet up with the official flotilla at sea on the following day.