Upbear
Up‐bear″ (?), v. t. To bear up; to raise aloft; to support in an elevated situation; to sustain. Spenser.One short sigh of breath, upboreEven to the seat of God. Milton.A monstr...
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary, C. & G. Merriam Co., 1913.
2.574 entries
Up‐bear″ (?), v. t. To bear up; to raise aloft; to support in an elevated situation; to sustain. Spenser.One short sigh of breath, upboreEven to the seat of God. Milton.A monstr...
Up‐bind″ (?), v. t. To bind up. Collins.
Up‐blow″, v. t. To inflate. Spenser.
Up‐blow″, v. i. To blow up; as, the wind upblows from the sea. Spenser.
Up‐braid″ (?), v. i. [imp. & p. p.Upbraided; p. pr. & vb. n.Upbraiding.] [OE. upbreiden; AS, upp up + bregdan to draw, twist, weave, or the kindred Icel. bregða to draw, brandis...
Up‐braid″, v. i. To utter upbraidings. Pope.
Up‐braid″, n. The act of reproaching; contumely. “ Foul upbraid.” Spenser.
Up‐break″ (?), v. i. To break upwards; to force away or passage to the surface.
Up″break′ (?), n. A breaking upward or bursting forth; an upburst. Mrs. Browning.
Up‐breathe″ (?), v. r. To breathe up or out; to exhale. Marston.
Up‐breed″ (?), v. t. To rear, or bring up; to nurse. “Upbred in a foreign country.” Holinshed.
Up‐brought″ (?), a. Brought up; educated. Spenser.
Up‐buoy″ance (?), n. The act of buoying up; uplifting. Coleridge.
Up″burst′ (?), n. The act of bursting upwards; a breaking through to the surface; an upbreak or uprush; as, an upburst of molten matter.
Up″cast′ (?), a. Cast up; thrown upward; as, with upcast eyes. Addison.
Up″cast′ (?), n. 1. (Bowling) A cast; a throw. Shak.2. (Mining.) The ventilating shaft of a mine out of which the air passes after having circulated through the mine; — distingu...
Up‐cast″ (?), v. t. 1. To cast or throw up; to turn upward. Chaucer.2. To taunt; to reproach; to upbraid.
Up″caught′ (?), a. Seized or caught up. “ She bears upcaught a mariner away.” Cowper.
Up‐cheer″ (?), v. t. To cheer up. Spenser.
Up‐climb″ (?), v. t. & i. To climb up; to ascend.Upclomb the shadowy pine above the woven copse. Tennyson.
Up‐coil″ (?), v. t. & i. To coil up; to make into a coil, or to be made into a coil.
Up″coun′try (?), adv. In an upcountry direction; as, to live upcountry.
Up″coun′try, a. Living or situated remote from the seacoast; as, an upcountry residence. — n. The interior of the country.
Up‐curl″ (?), v. t. To curl up. Tennyson.
Up‐dive″ (?), v. i. To spring upward; to rise. Davies (Microcosmos).
Up‐draw″ (?), v. t. To draw up. Milton.
Up‐end″ (?), v. t. To end up; to set on end, as a cask.