uplean
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Verb
[edit]uplean (third-person singular simple present upleans, present participle upleaning, simple past and past participle upleant or upleaned)
- (transitive, intransitive, literary) To lean or incline upward; to cause (something) to lean upward.
- 1834, Albert Pike, “Sunset” in Prose Sketches and Poems Written in the Western Country, Boston: Light & Horton, pp. 192-193,[1]
- The western sky is wallen
- With shadowy mountains, built upon the marge
- Of the horizon, from eve’s purple sheen,
- And thin gray clouds, that daringly uplean
- Their silver cones upon the crimson verge
- Of the high zenith,
- 1856, Gold-Pen (pseudonym), “My Cottage” in Poems, Philadelphia: Lippincott, 2nd edition, pp. 188-189,[2]
- I forced the slowly yielding door
- That ope’d on Sabbath morn no more,
- And found all that the winds withstood,
- Was an upleaning piece of wood.
- 1895, Orelia Key Bell, “And every morning as I passed her bower” in Poems, Philadelphia: Rodgers, p. 181,[3]
- 1902, George Macdonald Major, “A Chinatown Idyll” in Lays of Chinatown, New York: The Lloyd Press, 2nd edition, p. 64,[4]
- A rakish hat was tilted o’er his eyes.
- A cigarette, with intermittent fire,
- Upleaned to meet it from his stern set lips.
- 1834, Albert Pike, “Sunset” in Prose Sketches and Poems Written in the Western Country, Boston: Light & Horton, pp. 192-193,[1]
- (intransitive, obsolete, rare) To lean (on something).
- 1590, Edmund Spenser, “Book III, Canto II”, in The Faerie Queene. […], London: […] [John Wolfe] for William Ponsonbie, →OCLC, page 322:
- With that vpleaning on her elbow weake,
Her alablaster brest she soft did kis,
- 1591, Ed[mund] Sp[enser], “Virgils Gnat”, in Complaints. Containing Sundrie Small Poemes of the Worlds Vanitie. […], London: […] William Ponsonbie, […], →OCLC:
- […] thus his carelesse time
This shepheard driues, vpleaning on his batt,
And on shrill reedes chaunting his rustick rime,
Anagrams
[edit]Categories:
- English terms derived from Proto-Indo-European
- English terms derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *ḱley- (incline)
- English terms prefixed with up-
- English lemmas
- English verbs
- English transitive verbs
- English intransitive verbs
- English literary terms
- English terms with quotations
- English terms with obsolete senses
- English terms with rare senses