Beating up 

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Beating up is systematic punching, or hitting with a blunt instrument, many times, with the design or effect of causing much pain. It often causes widespread heavy bruising, and sometimes more serious damage, sometimes permanent; and psychological damage. Frequently, to abet this beating, one or more accomplices restrain the victim, often two accomplices, by an arm each.

In the USA it is often called "beating up on".

The "up" started as having meaning "completely" or similarly, as in "writing up" or "cleaning up".

In law it is a type of battery (crime).

A severe beating-up is sometimes called "beating to (a) pulp", or less often "pulping".

Slang or euphemistic expressions for beating-up include "doing over", "roughing up", "working over", and "processing".

Beating-up is often used:

A possible confusion

According to area and likelihood of snakebite, if a hospital receives a casualty who seems to have been beaten up, and those who brought him in do not report an assault, they should bear in mind that some haemolytic types of snake venom can cause widespread internal blood leakage into tissues causing an effect looking like heavy bruising which can fairly closely look like an effect of a severe beating.

Derivative word uses

Beating-up is familiar enough for metaphorical uses to develop, e.g.:

Other meanings

Distinguish from