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单词 to bear up
释义

> as lemmas

to bear up
to bear up
1. transitive. To carry (a person or thing) to a higher place or position. Also: to hold up while carrying.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > relative position > support > [verb (transitive)]
to bear upeOE
underbearc950
bearOE
holdc1000
weighc1200
to hold up1297
upholda1300
sustainc1330
undersetc1330
comforta1382
underbear1382
upbear1390
sustaina1398
upkeepc1412
carrya1425
supporta1425
chargea1500
convey1514
avoke1529
confirm1542
stay1548
to carry up1570
bolster1581
lift1590
upstay1590
atlas1593
sustent1605
statuminatea1628
firm1646
appui1656
establish1664
shoulder1674
to keep up1681
upheave1729
withhold1769
the world > space > relative position > high position > set in a high position [verb (transitive)] > hold up or aloft
to bear upeOE
bearc1380
to show up?1531
eOE tr. Bede Eccl. Hist. (Tanner) iv. xxiv. 340 Þa geseah heo þære foresprecenan Godes þeowe sawle Hilde þære abbudissan..to heofonum up borenne beon [L. ad caelum ferri].
c1400 Prose Versions New Test.: Prol. (Selwyn) (1904) 10 Y haue bor ȝou up on egles wynges & y-take ȝou to my-self.
1483 tr. Adam of Eynsham Reuelation xii They ware bore vppe an hy by the grete vyolente flamys of fier.
?1504 S. Hawes Example of Vertu sig. ff.iv Dame grace..bare vp her trayne.
1612 I. M. tr. Most Famous Hist. Meruine i. xv. 101 Thus was the faire lady Gratiana borne vp to the cloudes.
1730 R. Witham Annot. New Test. I. (Matt. xxvii. 31) 128 Whether it were that they made Simon carry the whole cross, or whether he only bore it up behind; is not expressed.
1897 M. MacDonagh Bk. of Parl. x. 188 Ladies-in-waiting were grouped behind the young Queen, bearing up her long train.
2016 L. Serafim To look on Death No More (e-book ed.) He told Danae to close her eyes and imagine they were leaving the earth behind, that Elektra was bearing them up into the sky.
2. transitive. To hold (a person or thing) up and prevent him, her, or it from falling or sinking; to support, keep up.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > relative position > support > [verb (transitive)] > specifically a person: keep from falling
to bear upOE
steady1848
OE Ælfric Catholic Homilies: 1st Ser. (Royal) (1997) i. 185 Þæt flod weox ða, & bær up þone arc.
a1225 (c1200) Vices & Virtues (1888) 95 Ðe postes..sculen beren up ðis weorc.
a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add. 27944) (1975) I. v. liv. 269 Þe foot..beriþ vp al þe body.
1611 Bible (King James) Judges xvi. 29 The two middle pillars..on which it was borne vp. View more context for this quotation
1848 New Hampsh. Statesman 21 July The water bore her up, as if she sat on a swing.
1905 Publ. Cupples & Leon in Publishers' Trade List Ann. If his cupped and blistered legs would bear him up, Mr. Lent would qualify as a rival of Simeon Ford as an after-dinner speaker.
2000 Chaucer Rev. 35 182 The pillars of poets that bear up the ceiling in Fame's palace symbolically underscore the importance of poetic tradition.
3. transitive. To lift or raise (the head, feathers, etc.). Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > upward movement > raising > make to go up or cause to rise [verb (transitive)] > raise > specifically a part of the body
to bear upc1175
to cast upc1384
to throw upa1413
erect1609
to up with1766
c1175 Ormulum (Burchfield transcript) l. 1297 Forr bule lateþþ modiliȝ. & bereþþ upp hiss hæfedd.
c1460 (a1449) J. Lydgate Minor Poems (1934) ii. 765 The Pecok..Berth up his fethrys displayed like a sayl.
1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost vii. 470 The swift Stag..Bore up his branching head.
1889 Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. Oct. 447/2 The great brute rose to his touch, closing its eyes, and bearing up its head like a cat.
4.
a. transitive. To exalt, raise up (a person or thing). Formerly also reflexive: †to exalt oneself; to promote oneself on the strength of a specified circumstance (obsolete). Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > pride > pretension to superiority > pretend to superiority [verb (reflexive)]
to bear up?a1425
authorize1590
exalt1611
ritz1911
the mind > attention and judgement > esteem > approval or sanction > commendation or praise > commend or praise [verb (transitive)]
heryc735
mickleeOE
loveOE
praise?c1225
upraisea1300
alosec1300
commenda1340
allow1340
laud1377
lose1377
avauntc1380
magnifya1382
enhancea1400
roosea1400
recommendc1400
recommanda1413
to bear up?a1425
exalt1430
to say well (also evil, ill, etc.) of (also by)1445
laudifyc1470
gloryc1475
advance1483
to bear out1485
prizec1485
to be or to have in laudationa1500
joya1500
extol1509
collaud1512
concend?1521
solemnize?1521
celebrate1522
stellify1523
to set up1535
well-word1547
predicate1552
glorify1557
to set forth1565
admire1566
to be up with1592
voice1594
magnificate1598
plaud1598
concelebrate1599
encomionize1599
to con laud1602
applauda1616
panegyrize1617
acclamate1624
to set offa1625
acclaim1626
raise1645
complement1649
encomiate1651
voguec1661
phrase1675
to set out1688
Alexander1700
talk1723
panegyricize1777
bemouth1799
eulogizea1810
rhapsodize1819
crack up1829
rhapsody1847
the mind > attention and judgement > esteem > reputation > majesty, glory, or grandeur > exaltation or glorification > exalt or glorify [verb (transitive)]
heavec825
higheOE
brightenOE
clarifya1340
glorifya1340
enhancec1374
stellifyc1384
biga1400
exalt?a1400
raisea1400
shrinea1400
to bear up?a1425
enhighc1440
erect?a1475
assumec1503
amount1523
dignifya1530
to set up1535
extol1545
enthronize1547
augment1567
sublimate?1567
sublime1568
assumptc1571
begoda1576
royalize1589
suscitate1598
swell1601
consecrate1605
realize1611
reara1616
sphere1615
ingreata1620
superexalta1626
soara1627
ascend1628
rise1628
embroider1629
apotheose1632
grandize1640
engreaten1641
engrandizea1652
mount1651
intronificate1653
magnificent1656
superposit1661
grandify1665
heroify1677
apotheosize1695
enthrone1699
aggrandize1702
pantheonize1801
hoist1814
princify1847
queen1880
heroize1887
?a1425 (a1415) Lanterne of Liȝt (Harl.) (1917) 10 (MED) Þe fifþe synne is envie..as whanne þi neiȝbour is wise, wel gouerned, preisid or born vp.
1530 Myroure Oure Ladye (Fawkes) (1873) ii. 188 Thou ouercomest them that bere vp themselfe.
1695 B. Jenks Liberty of Prayer Asserted ii. ii. 152 Whoever thinks to bear himself up, with a Credit Usurpt at the loss of God's Honour, who will be sure to make his Despisers Contemptible.
1783 Henry's Treat. Baptism Abridged vi. 235 Much of the mercy of having children lies in this, that we have them..not only to honour us, and to bear up our names, but to honour God, and to bear up his name in the world.
1953 Fitchburg (Mass.) Sentinel 23 May 3/4 To bear up God, to seek His wisdom..lifts all life.
b. transitive. To support or endorse (a person) in a course of action; to uphold (a principle); to support (a cause). Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > easiness > aid, help, or assistance > support > support or encouragement > support or encourage [verb (transitive)] > a cause, principle, etc.
to bear upc1475
patrocinate1593
patrocinea1633
upstand1722
to fight the good fight1809
c1475 (?c1400) Apol. Lollard Doctr. (1842) 64 Now are iust men oft wrongid, and schrewis..born vp in iuel.
1592 J. Throckmorton Petition most Excellent Maiestie 31 The writers against the gouuernement of Bishops do maliciouslie diffame the Princes that beare it vp.
1606 L. Bryskett Disc. Ciuill Life 20 Persons to assist my accuser, and beare vp his cause.
1658 O. Cromwell Speech 25 Jan. in Lett. & Speeches (1857) III. 343 Through want to bear up our Honour at Sea.
1857 Home & Foreign Rec. Free Church Scotl. Nov. 94/2 We have supported and borne up false creeds.
c. intransitive. To stand firm, hold out against adversity or under difficult circumstances; to keep up one's courage or spirits; to cope. Now also in neutral sense: to fare, get on.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > difficulty > opposition > oppose [verb (intransitive)] > resist > maintain resistance
to hold out1585
to bear upa1616
a1616 W. Shakespeare Tempest (1623) iii. ii. 3 Which rais'd in me An vndergoing stomacke, to beare vp Against what should ensue.
1653 H. More Antidote against Atheisme i. ix. 26 Bearing up as well as they can.
1711 J. Addison Spectator No. 256. ¶8 To bear up under Scandal and Defamation.
1796 E. Burke Two Lett. Peace Regicide Directory France in Wks. (1842) II. 291 Bearing up against those vicissitudes of fortune.
1852 H. B. Stowe Uncle Tom's Cabin I. iii. 37 Bear up, now; and good-by; for I'm going.
1928 S. Kaye-Smith Iron & Smoke iv. 270 ‘How are you, Isabel?’ she heard her own voice ask nervously. ‘Oh, bearing up, as the boys say. Or getting on as well as can be expected.’
2012 London Evening Standard (Nexis) 18 Dec. 15 I asked one teenager how she was bearing up and she answered bravely that she was fine.
d. transitive. To keep up the courage or spirits of (a person).
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > pleasure > cheerfulness > make cheerful [verb (transitive)] > keep cheerful
to bear up1643
1643 J. Caryl Expos. 3 First Chaps. Iob i. 202 Consider the two extreames, the beginning and the ending, and that will beare thee up in the middle condition.
1750 S. Johnson Rambler No. 68 (1753) I Most are born up by some private Satisfaction..which they never communicate.
1852 Hammers & Ploughshares iv. 27 What hope have you to bear you up?
2010 Lancs. Tel. (Nexis) 13 Feb. You were borne up by knowing there were so many people praying for you.
5. intransitive. Nautical. To put the helm of a ship up so as to turn into the wind, often in order to avoid an obstacle or collision. Also with for indicating a destination. Cf. to bear away 3 at Phrasal verbs 1.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > travel by water > directing or managing a ship > direct or manage ship [verb (transitive)] > set a ship's course > sail towards or head for
to seek up14..
to bear up1582
to stand for ——a1594
to seek up for1632
1582 N. Lichefield tr. F. L. de Castanheda 1st Bk. Hist. Discouerie E. Indias xlix f. 107 The ship that Steuen de la Gama went in did beare vp onely with her fore saile, and his sprit Saile all to torne.
1611 Bible (King James) Acts xxvii. 15 The ship..could not beare vp into [Geneva make way against] the winde. View more context for this quotation
a1616 W. Shakespeare Tempest (1623) i. ii. 157 Beare vp, & boord 'em. View more context for this quotation
1778 J. Cook Jrnl. 3 June (1967) III. i. 373 Being past the rocks, they bore up to the Southward.
1798 in Ld. Nelson Dispatches & Lett. (1845) III. 48 Nelson immediately bore up under all sail, for Alexandria.
1840 Naut. Mag. & Naval Chron. 203 An established rule in nautical affairs: that the ship on the larboard tack shall bear up, to avoid coming in collision with vessels on the starboard tack, which are expected to keep their wind.
1920 H. W. Richmond Navy in War of 1739–48 II. vi. 120 He was obliged to bear up for Mahon, intending to refit as quickly as possible and then resume his station off the coast of Provence.
2007 Capital (Annapolis, Maryland) (Nexis) 8 July c9 As the wind came over the starboard side, Alinghi had the right-of-way, and New Zealand failed to keep clear. Alinghi had to bear up to avoid a hit.
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更新时间:2024/11/13 9:49:54