Uppluck
Up‐pluck″ (?), v. t. To pull or pluck up.
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary, C. & G. Merriam Co., 1913.
2.574 entries
Up‐pluck″ (?), v. t. To pull or pluck up.
Up‐pricked″ (?), a. Upraised; erect; — said of the ears of an animal. Mason.
Up‐prop″ (?), v. t. To prop up. Donne.
Up‐raise″ (?), v. t. To raise; to lift up.
Up‐rear″ (?), v. t. To raise; to erect. Byron.
Up‐ridged″ (?), a. Raised up in a ridge or ridges; as, a billow upridged. Cowper.
Up″right′ (?), a. [AS. upright, uppriht. See Up, and Right, a.] 1. In an erect position or posture; perpendicular; vertical, or nearly vertical; pointing upward; as, an upright ...
Up″right′, n. Something standing upright, as a piece of timber in a building. See Illust. of Frame.
Up″right′ (?), a.(Golf) Designating a club in which the head is approximately at a right angle with the shaft.
Up″right′ (?), n.(Basketwork) A tool made from a flat strip of steel with chisel edges at both ends, bent into horseshoe, the opening between the cutting edges being adjustable,...
Up‐right″eous‐ly (?), adv. [See Righteous.] In an upright or just manner. Shak.
Up″right′ly (?), adv. In an upright manner.
Up″right′ness (?), n. the quality or state of being upright.
Up‐rise″ (?), v. i. 1. To rise; to get up; to appear from below the horizon. “Uprose the sun.” Cowley.Uprose the virgin with the morning light. Pope.2. To have an upward directi...
Up‐rise″, n. The act of rising; appearance above the horizon; rising.Did ever raven sing so like a lark,That gives sweet tidings of the sun's uprise? Shak.
Up‐ris″ing, n. 1. Act of rising; also, a steep place; an ascent. “The steep uprising of the hill.” Shak.2. An insurrection; a popular revolt. J. P. Peters.
Up‐rist″ (?), n. Uprising. Chaucer.
Up‐rist″, obs.imp. of Uprise. Uprose. Chaucer.Nor dim nor red, like God's own headThe glorious sun uprist. Coleridge.
Up″roar (?), n. [D. oproer; akin to G. aufruhr, Dan. oprör, Sw. uppror; D. op up + roeren to stir; akin to AS. hr�ran to stir, hr�r stirring, active, G. rühren to stir, OHG. ruo...
Up‐roar″ (?), v. t. To throw into uproar or confusion. “Uproar the universal peace.” Shak.
Up‐roar″, v. i. To make an uproar. Carlyle.
Up‐roar″i‐ous (?), a. Making, or accompanied by, uproar, or noise and tumult; as, uproarious merriment.— Up‐roar″i‐ous‐ly, adv. — Up‐roar″i‐ous‐ness, n.
Up‐roll″ (?), v. t. To roll up. Milton.
Up‐root″ (?), v. t. To root up; to tear up by the roots, or as if by the roots; to remove utterly; to eradicate; to extirpate.Trees uprooted left their place. Dryden.At his comm...
Up‐rouse″ (?), v. t. To rouse up; to rouse from sleep; to awake; to arouse. Shak.
Up‐run″ (?), v. i. To run up; to ascend.The young sunThat in the Ram is four degrees uprun. Chaucer.of matchless might, who, like a thriving plant,Upran to manhood. Cowper.
Up‐rush″ (?), v. i. To rush upward. Southey.