upas 
6659 Uphantsenia 
upbraiding <up-.,ra',li,,K,,,. 1. The act or Ian- ncheert (u,,,i,,v ,.,-.,. 
i-:,,,,,,,,,, Darwin. 
3. Figuratively, something baneful or perni- 
cio.iH fr,,,,, . m,,ral point ,,l view: as, the upu 
of ilrunki'imcss. 
upas-tree (u'pas-tre), n. Seeupa*, 2. 
upaventuret, ./, [< up, pr,,,.. + ,n;; t ture. 
Of. iK-rnitn ii/nrc.] In case that; if. 
Your blunt pfrra. 
' 
* fua '? <> " f " wno upbraids; severe reproof or K/H-H.W r, F. Q.. VI. i. 44. 
re I )r H<%h - Upchurch pottery. See pottery 
upclimb (up-kin,,'!. r. /. and ,. To ,-liml, up: 
., . ., . . . 
2. Nausea; vomiting. [Prov. Eng.] 
Remar , <U fe^omae, The <vfrn.id.-w of the .tonucke. _,, ,., 
Cotgrdve. npCOll (iip- 
Pjwtom* the ihmdowjr pine above the woven cop*. 
M , A . T" 
),.<. and f. To wind up into a 
. 
Tin-}- lad,. ., that I should be buy In all my wlu to go Upbraiding (up-bra'ding), p. a. Reproachful: "".' 
as near the sentence and the words as I could, both that chiding. upcoming (up kum-ing), . The act 
were spoken to me mid that I ]>ake, upaernture thta The Doutlnn lln of coming up; uprising. Athrnimm. 
' 1 of thi> wnro 
"' " 
, 
I'm in 1 another time before the archbishop and his 
By. , Mf , sekct works, p. . \^) 
upbear (up-bar ), v. t. 1. To bear, carry, or 
i-:i isr aloft; lift; elevate; sustain aloft. 
And sad 
upbraidingly (up-bra'ding-li), arfr. In an up- 
braiding manner. B. Jonsan, Discoveries. 
or process 
. No. 3218. 
I) H31 
V.nny. u'p-country (un'kun'tri), ,/>. Toward the in- 
tenor; away from the seaboard. [Colloq.] 
. p-country (up'kun'tri), n. and a. I n. The 
our short sifth of human breath, upborne upbrayt (up-bra' ), r. A false form of upbraid, interior of the country. [Colloq.] 
Ev'n to the seat of Ood. Milton, P. L., xt. 147. Sponger, P. O., IV. i. 42. II. . Being or living away from the sea- 
swirtason wings of winds upborn they fly. upbrayt (up-bra'). n. A false form of upbraid, board; interior: as,an up-country village. [Col- 
Spenser, F. y., III. vi. 50. loq.] 
upbreak (up-brak'), f. i. To break or force a upcurl (up-kerl'), r. t. To curl or wreathe up- 
wav upward; come to the surface; appear, ward. Southcy, Thalaba, iv., 36. 
[Bare.] - ' 
p f> Odyssey, via 127. 
""' His resolve 
Upbore him, and flrra faith. ' 
Tennyson, Enoch Arden. 
Language ... upborne by . thought 
Lowell, Among my Books, 2d ser., p. 825. 
3f. To hold up ; commend. 
Ne him for his desire no shame, 
Al were It wist, but In prls and upborn 
Of alle lovers, wel more than beforn. 
Up-CUTVed (up'kervd), a. Curved upward ; re- 
When from tho gloom of the dark earth uvbrraki the curved: as, in entomology, an up-curved margin. 
tender bloom. LitUU't Living Age, CLXXV. 66. updelvet (up-delv'), r. t. [< ME. updelven; < n/, 
+ drlre.] To dig up. Palladitu, Husbondrie 
'. 8. ), p. 174. 
-' To rise to the surface. 
upbreak (up'brak), n. A breaking or bursting 
U U ' an upburst. Imp. Diet. 
upbind (up-bind'), V. t. 
Thy Injur'd robes up-bind! 
Breaking up; updlve (up-div'), t\ t. 
[Bare.] 
Thence make thy fame updive. 
Daciet, Mlcrocotmoi, p. 8 
, . . 
To breathe up OpdraW (up-drft'), v. t. [< ME. updrawcn; <up 
+ rfratr.J 1. To draw up. Coicjier, Iliad, I. 
A knight, whom from chlldhwle 
upbreaking (up-bra Ttmg), a. 
dissolving. 
Chaucer, Trollus, 1. 875. All ^partaking and disparting storm. 
To bind up. / Wilton, Lights and Shadows of Scottish Life, p. 104. 
Collin*, Ode to Peace, st. 3. Upbreathet (up-breTH'), P. t. 
linnt nr or out; exhale. Marston. 
' 8 P> upbreedt (up-bred'),, t . To breed up ; nurse ; 2. Figuratively to train or bring up. 
fun-bio ') r I trans To blow im tram U P- Holtnshed, Hist, of Scotland. 
P ' npbringt. r . *. To bring up ; nourish ; educate. 
H,.beuywa.^^^ith,uxry 4 iiy2i ^^ gp'tei^iS), . The process of 
II. intrant. To blow up from a given quarter bringing up. nourishing, or maintaining; train- 
or point. ing; education. Carlyh, Sartor Besartus( 1831), 
The watry Southwinde, from the sealmrd ooste *v jij / T.-U/V 
Upblowing. Spewer, F. Q., III. Iv. 13. UpbtUld (up-blld ), p. t. To build up; edify; 
upbraid (up-brad'), v. [< ME. upbraidex, up- est 
brayrien, upbreiden, upbreyden, oupbreidcn, re- ^5, ai w 1 ,', 3 h '7 t ^ eaue ''jSSV^SSfi havu l >e ?" ," 
proach, lit. 'seize upon, attack' ; < up + brai&, FVOC ' ** P>veh - I>Meanh - l - 149 - 
scold: see ftrairfi and aftrnirf.] I trans. I To upbuilding (up-bil ding), . The act or pro- 
reproach for some fault or offense ; charge re- cess of building up, in any sense; edification; 
Diet 
-'),.. t. [< MB 
1 -up, prepare. 
proachfully; reproach: regularly followed by 
with or for (rarely of) before the thing imputed. 
If you refuse your aid, . . . yet do not 
Upbraid us with our distress. 
Shale., COT., v. L 35. 
^finT^e 8 ?]"- fbUOyiDg ^CF^ 1 '"'''' 
To cast at u, by every side. 
Rom. of the Rott, 1. 7087. 
upend (up-end'), v.t. To set on end, as a barrel. 
*" approaching heavy sea may carry the boat away on 
Its front, and tnrn it broadside on, or up-end It. 
<*, Seamanship, p. on. 
Upending-tongs, heavy tongs with a swinging support, 
h 
up or 
Me rather, bright guests, with your wings of upbuoyanee 
Bear aloft to your homes, to your banquets of joyancc. 
V. t. 
'loom, that the hammer may 
To fill up; make full. 
It were a thing monstrously absurd and contradictory 
Coleridge, Visit of the Gods. UpfloW (up-flo'), r. i. 
A cup ... to the brim upjtld. Spenur, F. Q., IV. lit 42. 
.. . >,.., ,,,,,,, , ,,,,,1 IMI.L.M '^ O ascen d; stream up. 
to'give'the p^ilain'e^a^e^Utrve^poweV^and'lthen'to upburst (up'berst), . A bursting up; a break- Southey, Thalaba, ii. [Rare.] 
upbraid them for transgressing old establishments. ing a way up and through; an uprush: as, an UpflOW (up no), w. A flowing up; rise: as, an 
Milton, Ana. to Elkon Basillke, j 19. (Richardton.) upburst of lava. H. O. Forbes, Eastern Archi- 
2f. To offer as an accusation or charge against pelago, p. 232. 
some person or thing: with to before the per- upby (up'bi), adv. [< up + fey 1 .] A little way 
son or thing blamed. further on; up the way. [Scotch.] 
*Kflou> of *air. 'Pltilos. Mag.~&h se'r., XXX. 501. 
upfling (up-fling'), v. t. To fling or throw up. 
[Bare.] 
unfolded (up-fol'ded), a. Folded up. J. Wilson, 
. . . . 
You shall be very good friends hereafter, and thl never upcast (up-kasf), v. t. [< ME. upcasten ; < up + Lights and Shadows of Scottish Life. [Bare.] 
be remembered or upbraided. cast."] To cast or throw up. upgatner (up-gaTH'er), r. t. 
to be rem 
U. Jonton, Eplcome, Iv. 2. 
It hath been upbraided to men of my trade 
That oftentimes we are the cause of thia crime upcast (up'kast), o. 
Custance and eek hlr child the see upaute. 
Chaucer, Man of Law s Tale, 1 
80S. 
Fair, ill. i. 
^'" 
1 . Cast up : a term used 
bowling ._ 2 . Thrown or turned upward ; di- 
^.To81rdod- 
To gather up or 
together; contract. Spenser. [Bare.] 
UpgaZG (up-gaz'), V. i. To gaze upward ; look 
steadily upward. Byron, Childe Harold, ii. 
Atlantic, 
How much doth thy kindness upbraid my wickedness ! 
Sir P. Sidney, 
Will not the sobriety of the very Turk, upbraid our ex- 
cesses and debaucheries? Stiltingfleet, Sermons, I. ill. 
6t. To make a subject of reproach or chiding. 
I would not boast my actions, yet 'tis lawful 
To upbraid my benefits to unthankful men. 
Matringtr, Unnatural Combat, 1. 1. 
He who hath done a good turn should so forget it as 
not to speak of It; but he that boaste it, or ufraid* it, 
hath paid himself. Jer. Taylor, Holy Living, Iv. 8. 
=8yn. 1. jr, Flou,, etc. See annul. 
n. intrans. To utter upbraidings or re- 
Thus fall to the ground the views of those who have wa rd. Lancet, No. 3479, p. 955. 
sought for the cause of these movement*. In the different UDgTOW (up-gro'), v. i. To grow up. 
P** 8 r vlti . e "' ''>* " "> cyclones and anticclones, 
to whlch the atr mMt 
Milton, 
T " e P relllte 'till keeping some shreda of civil power 
'""'withstanding the upgrowth of the plebeian layman's 
Th ' CentvT y> xxxv - 2- 
2 " That which K rOWS "P or out: ^ ewtilmgi- 
Annt Vrt i "9 
To ' 
Have we not known thee slave ! of all our host 
The man who acts the least upbrart, the most 
. 
11 H7 s 'e a ntlon'sTar "filtep 
Till morning's latest sunlight fades 
On the blue tablet of the deep I 
upbraidt, . 
limit. ,,iiiilii;;,l; from the verb.] 
DgTO 
P . L., ix. 677. [Bare.] 
UpgTOWth (up'groth), n. 1. The process of 
3. i n bowling, a cast; a throw. growing up; development; rise and progress; 
Was there ever man hnd such luck ! When I kiss'd tho "PP 1 "^ ** < !rf t- 
i,,,^ , , gn un-eait to be hit away ! 
' Shak., Cymbellne, II. 1. 2. 
the shaft or TW 
^takeTout of a inin 
lit or a mine, 
the out-take : the opposite of downcast (which 
8ee ) and df '"*<- 1"*?' nd out-take are terms 
more generally applied to drifts, levels, or horizontal pas- 
sages; downetwt and upu( to vertical or Inclined shafts, upgusb (up'gugh), n. A gushing upward: as, an 
4. An upward current of air passing through upgiuh of feeling. G. .S. Hall, German Culture, 
p . 155. rRare. ] 
uphand (up'hand), a. Lifted by the hand or 
^nds : as an uphand sledge (a large hammer 
lifted with both hands). 
The upkand sledge is used by underworkmen. 
*. Mechanical Exercise*. 
Uphang (up-hang'), r. '. To hang up ; suspend 
loft. S 
a ghaft or the like ._ 5, The sta of b ing ovr 
turned; an upset. [Scotch.] 
What .r the upcaft and terror that I got a wee whi.e 
W"*. mv head ' lalr enengh. Scott, 
6. A taunt ; a reproach. [Scotch.] 
lolme*, Birthday of D. Webster. upcaug ht ( U p-kat f ), n. Caught or seized up. 
[< ME. upbnritl. /''"'<"W<'- up- ,s he bears upeauakt a mariner away. 
Cowper, Odyssey, xll. 118. or affix al 
Spenser, Visions of Bellay, vi. 
The act of up- . . 
hraicling; reproach; contumely; abuse. Clii>- upchancet, <idi: [< ME. upekaunce; < up, prep., [Bare.] 
imiii. Iliiid, vi. 389. + chance. Ct. perchance.') Perchance ; perhaps. Uphantsnia (u-fau-te'ni-a), H. [XL.] A 
upbraider(up-bra'der),H. [< upbraid + -!.] pp-Aone ye may them mete. generic name given by Vaiiuxem to a fossil 
Lytell Goto of Kobyn Bode (Child's Ballads, V. 81). from the Chemung group in New York, of very 
One who upbraids or reproves. 
