tack up

Related to tack up: tack onto

tack up

1. To affix something onto a higher thing, place, or surface with or as with tacks. A noun or pronoun can be used between "tack" and "up." I've got a temp job tacking up fliers all over town for the mayor's re-election campaign. We've been tacking plywood up against all our windows to keep them from getting damaged in the storm.
2. To fit a horse with its saddle and bridle. A noun or pronoun can be used between "tack" and "up." My job is to tack up the horses before the guests take them out in the morning. In addition to learning how to ride horses, kids come to our camp to learn how to clean them, groom them, and tack them up.
See also: tack, up
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

tack something up

to fasten something onto something with tacks. The drapes started to fall, so we tacked them up again. Please tack up these posters.
See also: tack, up
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs.

tack up

v.
1. To post something with or as if with a tack: I tacked up a poster of my favorite band. The teacher tacked the best students' essays up on the wall.
2. To outfit a horse with a harness and saddle: The cowboy tacked up the horse. We can take the horses out for a ride after you've tacked them up.
See also: tack, up
The American Heritage® Dictionary of Phrasal Verbs.
See also:
  • rescue from
  • rescue from (someone or something)
  • ask back
  • back onto
  • back onto (something)
  • involve with
  • involve with (someone or something)
  • involved with
  • identify with
  • arrange some music for
References in periodicals archive
That gives them plenty of time to tack up the big fees they crave: Factoring $100,000 worth of receivables each month, for example, could cost $60,000--or triple the amount of interest you'd likely pay for an equal line of credit.