| 单词 | build | 
| 释义 | buildn.ΘΚΠ society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabited place > a building > 			[noun]		 bottleeOE houseeOE boldOE building1297 builda1387 edificec1386 mansion1389 bigginga1400 housinga1400 edification1432 edifying1432 fabric1483 edify1555 structure1560 erection1609 framec1639 bastiment1679 drum1846 dump1899 gaff1932 a1387    J. Trevisa tr.  R. Higden Polychron. 		(St. John's Cambr.)	 		(1869)	 II. 71  				Buldes..in þe manere of Rome [L. ædificia Romano more]. c1400						 (?c1380)						    Pearl l. 963  				Bryng me to þat bygly bylde. c1475						 (c1450)						    P. Idley Instr. to his Son 		(Cambr.)	 		(1935)	  ii. A. l. 1113 (MED)  				I se som men..make grete bildes, Areyse grete towres and hye walles. c1600						 (?c1395)						    Pierce Ploughman's Crede 		(Trin. Cambr. R.3.15)	 		(1873)	 l. 157  				Swich a bild bold, y-buld opon erþe heiȝte Say i nouȝt in certeine siþþe a longe tyme.  2.   a.  The way in which something (esp. a vehicle) is designed, manufactured, or constructed; its structure, form, or make.In early use esp. of a ship or carriage; now chiefly of a car. ΘΚΠ the world > existence and causation > creation > 			[noun]		 > style of creation or construction > of manufactured things makea1325 makinga1398 model1597 build1667 1655    R. Fanshawe tr.  L. de Camoens Lusiad  vii. xxviii. 141  				Towards the Ships..return they straight: Which the Moor knew, when he the Build survay'd. 1668    S. Pepys Diary 30 Oct. 		(1976)	 IX. 342  				He finds most infinite fault with it [sc. my coach]..and so I do resolve to have one of his build. 1707    Articles of Union 		(Parl. Scotl.)	 16 Jan. 107 in  A. Boyer Hist. Reign Queen Anne: Year the Fifth App.  				That all Ships..of Scotland,..though Foreign Built, be deem'd, and pass as Ships of the Build of Great Britain. 1842    T. De Quincey Philos. Herodotus in  Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. Jan. 20/1  				The awkwardness of their build for fast sailing. 1892    W. W. Greener Breech-loader 95  				The ‘try gun’..is of use in fitting a sportsman who needs a gun of special build. 1913    Sat. Evening Post 		(Philadelphia)	 22 Feb. 28/1 		(advt.)	  				The rugged build and the extra thickness of the tread make it unusually enduring in service. Preferred by motorists everywhere. 2013    D. Barsby et al.  BTEC Level 2 Firsts in Sport 205/1  				There have been several rule changes that affect the design and build of the car.  b.  figurative and in extended use: the way someone or something is formed or composed; (hence also) the constitution or nature of someone or something. ΘΠ the world > existence and causation > creation > 			[noun]		 > style of creation or construction shaft888 suitc1330 generationa1382 makinga1398 frame?1520 workmanship1578 imagerya1592 model1597 fabricaturec1600 builtc1615 fabric1644 module1649 get-up1857 fashioning1870 the world > relative properties > kind or sort > 			[noun]		 > of construction or composition shaft888 makea1325 suitc1330 makinga1398 mark1482 inventiona1513 workmanship1578 cut1590 model1597 mould1667 fashioning1870 Mk.1921 1832    H. Coleridge Worthies Yorks. & Lancs. 3  				Andrew Marvell, a patriot of the old Roman build. 1842    Todd's Cycl. Anat. & Physiol. III. 523/1  				The build of the fibre is..of no importance. 1920    Jrnl. Mental Sci. July 294  				The surgeon and the physician and equally the neurologist and psychiatrist differ in mental build. 1986    A. S. Romer  & T. S. Parsons Vertebr. Body 		(ed. 6)	 ix. 283  				In reptiles, the dorsal trunk muscles remain in part segmentally divided but tend to have a complex build. 2012    Web Newswire 		(Nexis)	 24 Jan.  				I believe students with athletic build of mind benefit not only in the field of sport and academics, but even long after they step off of it.  3.  The proportions of a person's or animal's body; bodily shape or physique. ΘΚΠ the world > life > the body > bodily shape or physique > 			[noun]		 featurec1325 making1340 staturec1380 statea1387 bonea1400 figurec1400 makec1425 corpulence1477 corsage1481 makdom1488 mouldc1550 corporature1555 frame1566 dimension1600 limit1608 set1611 timber1612 compact1646 taille1663 fabric1695 moulding1815 physique1826 tournure1827 build1832 form1849 body type1866 body build1907 somatotype1940 size1985 1828    Ann. Reg. 1827 Manners, Customs, &c. 500/1  				The Aga was a Nubian, small, and of a slender build. 1853    E. K. Kane U.S. Grinnell Exped. xxii. 175  				In build he [sc. a polar bear] was very solid. 1874    J. R. Green Short Hist. Eng. People ii. §3. 67  				The peasant in his cap and blouse recalls the build and features of the small English farmer. 1926    E. F. Benson Queen of Spa in  Desirable Resid. 		(1992)	 134  				She was terribly smartly dressed with skirts that, considering her build, were unnecessarily short. 1947    Sun 		(Baltimore)	 15 Aug. 12/6  				He is a stocky man who..has the build of a quarterback. 1970    Dog World 6 Nov. 1739/1  				This is a breed of gundog which looks very much like the English working Setter but is a little heavier in build. 2021    East Anglian Daily Times 		(Nexis)	 4 Sept.  				He is described as white, 5ft 9in tall and of medium build with brown hair.  4.  The action or activity of building something or of undertaking a building project; (also) the period during which this takes place. Later also: the result of this. Recorded earliest as a modifier (see  Compounds). Π 1938    J. Normile Better Homes & Gardens Bk. Bildcost Home Plans 		(Rev. ed.)	 4/2  				An architect, building-material dealer, or contractor will be glad to give you the build cost. 1965    Investig. Pressure Prediction Methods for Radial Flow Impellers: Phase II Final Rep. 		(Pratt & Whitney Aircraft)	  iii. 1  				Runouts on the rotating assembly were measured at various stages during the build. 1990    Sunday Times 2 Dec.  vi. 6/2 		(advt.)	  				The build is targeted to pass 20,000 homes next year, rising to 37,000 per annum as the momentum increases. 2005    Independent 19 Oct. (Property section) 5/3  				The end of the build is almost in sight. Last week, we gave our notice to the landlord of our Brixton flat, so..we will be moving in at the end of November. 2012    Hull Daily Mail 		(Nexis)	 3 Mar. (News section) 14  				It was..a stunning build that goes against the boring misconception..of renewable energy.  5.  The (usually gradual) accumulation or increase of something; a build-up. Π 1942    Instrument Flying Training (U.S. War Dept.Techn. Man. TM 1-445) 86  				If there is no change in signal strength or if there is no change in the background, after several minutes of flight turn 90° and recheck for fade or build. 1961    Trans. 5th Res. Conf. Chemotherapy Stud. in Psychiatry 1960 13  				The same gradual build of dosage schedule was followed for all patients. 2001    Business Week 30 July 54/2  				I used to think only outrageous products were worthy of viral marketing..but even a loved American food like the hot dog can generate a lot of discussion and a viral build. 2021    Postmedia Breaking News 		(Nexis)	 23 Jan.  				Investors and economists are split on the inflation outlook, with some projecting price pressures will keep..while others forecast the build in inflation will be short-lived.  6.  Computing. The process or an instance of constructing a program from source code or elements of an existing program and other resources such as menu templates, images, icons, etc. Also: the result of this; a compiled program. Cf. build v. 3e. Π 1976    R. C. Tausworthe Standardized Devel. Computer Software I. x. 343  				The Interface Control Engineer also has the responsibility of all program ‘builds’; that is, the linking together of program elements (modules and dummy stubs) in preparation for testing. 1989    DesignCenter 		(U.S.)	  ii. 8/3  				For example, program builds can be done remotely, providing increased performance for individual engineers. 2004    .net Christmas Issue 44/3  				When code is checked in, the product is available for testing for some time (this is what we call nightly builds), and people on the internet can look at it and make sure it's safe. 2016    K. Edwards in  H. Lowood  & R. Guins Debugging Game Hist. xii. 97  				Localization..typically includes translating resources and assets from the original language to the target language, implementing these translated assets into an internationalized build, and then testing, editing, and fixing bugs in the translation. Compounds  General use as a modifier, as in  build cost,  build process,  build schedule, etc. Π 1938    J. Normile Better Homes & Gardens Bk. Bildcost Home Plans 		(Rev. ed.)	 4/2  				An architect, building-material dealer, or contractor will be glad to give you the build cost. 1974    Argosy Aug. 14/3  				The initial build schedule called for assembly of 60 units. 1991    Constr. Weekly Products Suppl. Sept. 20/1  				Even before its completion, Gravelly Hill was attacked as an eyesore. Subsequent criticisms have centred on build quality. 2010    Esquire Nov. 71/4  				This [guitar] has undergone meticulous scrutiny at every stage of the build process, from wood choice..to the final setup. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2022). buildv.α. Old English byldan, early Middle English beolde (south-western), Middle English beelde, Middle English beilde (south-eastern), Middle English beld, Middle English belde, Middle English bielde, Middle English bijlde, Middle English bilede, Middle English bolde (south-western), Middle English–1500s bild, Middle English–1500s bilde, Middle English–1500s bulde, Middle English–1500s byld, Middle English–1500s bylde, Middle English–1600s builde, Middle English–1600s buylde, Middle English– build, 1500s beald, 1500s bield, 1500s byeld, 1500s–1600s buld, 1500s–1600s buyld, 1500s–1600s bwild, 1600s bwyld; English regional (northern) 1800s beeld, 1800s beild, 1800s bield; Scottish pre-1700 beild, pre-1700 beilde, pre-1700 beld, pre-1700 beuld, pre-1700 beulld, pre-1700 bild, pre-1700 boold, pre-1700 bould, pre-1700 bueld, pre-1700 builde, pre-1700 buld, pre-1700 bulld, pre-1700 buyld, pre-1700 bwylde, pre-1700 1700s– build; N.E.D. (1888) also records a form Middle English bield. β. chiefly East Anglian Middle English beyll (northern), Middle English bile, Middle English byle, Middle English byll, Middle English bylle; English regional (northern) 1800s beel.2. Past tense. α. Old English–Middle English bylde, Middle English belde, Middle English bild, Middle English bilde, Middle English bilid, Middle English billed, Middle English builde, Middle English bulde, Middle English buyld, Middle English buylde, Middle English byld, Middle English byled, Middle English byllid, Middle English byllyd. β. Middle English beeldide, Middle English belded, Middle English bildede, Middle English bildide, Middle English byldede, Middle English byldytte, Middle English–1500s bilded, Middle English–1500s bylded, Middle English–1500s byldid, Middle English–1500s byldyd, Middle English–1600s buylded, late Middle English– builded (now archaic, regional, or nonstandard), 1500s belldete, 1500s bildid, 1500s buyldyd, 1500s–1600s bulded; also Scottish pre-1700 beildit, pre-1700 beldit, pre-1700 buildit, pre-1700 buldit, pre-1700 buyldit. γ. Middle English bilt, Middle English bilte, Middle English bult, Middle English bulte, Middle English bylt, Middle English bylte, Middle English–1600s buylt, 1500s–1600s builte, 1500s– built, 1800s–1900s belt (English regional (northern and north-east midlands)); Scottish pre-1700 belt, pre-1700 buelt, pre-1700 1700s– built. δ. U.S. regional (in African-American usage) 1800s builted.3. Past participle. α. early Middle English ȝebyld (south-west midlands), Middle English beeld, Middle English beld, Middle English bild, Middle English bilde, Middle English biled, Middle English bilid, Middle English billed, Middle English bulde, Middle English bulled, Middle English buylde, Middle English bylde, Middle English bylid, Middle English bylyd, Middle English ibelde, Middle English ibilde, Middle English ibuld, Middle English ibulde, Middle English ibyld, Middle English ybeld, Middle English ybelde, Middle English ybilde, Middle English ybuld, Middle English ybuyld, Middle English ybylde, Middle English ybylede, Middle English ybylid, Middle English–1500s buyld, Middle English–1600s buld, 1500s build, 1500s bylled, 1500s byllyd; Scottish pre-1700 beild, pre-1700 bullid. β. Middle English beeldid, Middle English beeldide, Middle English belded (in a late copy), Middle English beldyd, Middle English beyldede, Middle English beyldid, Middle English bieldid, Middle English byldede, Middle English byldid, Middle English byldyd, Middle English ibilded, Middle English ybeldyde, Middle English ybuylded, Middle English–1500s bilded, Middle English–1500s bildid, Middle English–1500s bylded, Middle English–1600s buylded, late Middle English– builded (now archaic, regional, or nonstandard), 1500s buildyd, 1500s buldyd, 1500s buyldyd, 1500s buyldyt; also Scottish pre-1700 beilded, pre-1700 beildit, pre-1700 beildyt, pre-1700 beldit, pre-1700 bildit, pre-1700 bouldit, pre-1700 buildit, pre-1700 bulded, pre-1700 buldit, pre-1700 buyldit, pre-1700 ybeildit, pre-1700 ybeldyt; N.E.D. (1888) also records a form late Middle English beldid. γ. Middle English belt, Middle English bilte, Middle English bult, Middle English bylte, Middle English ybilt, Middle English ybilte, Middle English ybuylt, Middle English ybylt, Middle English–1500s bilt, Middle English–1500s bylt, Middle English–1500s ibylt, 1500s–1600s builte, 1500s–1600s buylt, 1500s–1600s ybuilt (archaic), 1500s– built; Scottish pre-1700 belt, pre-1700 buelt, pre-1700 1700s– built. δ. U.S. regional (in African-American usage) 1900s– builted.  I.  To construct, make, and related senses.  1.   a.  transitive. To construct, put up, erect (a house or other dwelling or building); to construct (a permanent static structure such as a wall, bridge, or architectural feature, a road or railway, etc.). Also: to commission, finance, direct, or oversee the construction of (something of this type). ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > industry > building or constructing > build or construct			[verb (transitive)]		 timbera900 workOE betimberOE craftOE buildc1275 lifta1300 stagec1330 upraise1338 wright1338 edifya1340 to make outa1382 to make upa1382 biga1400 housea1400 risea1400 telda1400–50 to work upa1450 redress1481 levy1495 upmake1507 upbuild1513 exstruct?c1550 construct1663 to run up1686 practise1739 to lay up1788 elevate1798 to put up1818 to lay down1851 practicate1851 OE    Bounds (Sawyer 1388) 		(transcript of lost MS)	 in  D. Hooke Warwickshire Anglo-Saxon Charter-bounds 		(1999)	 121  				Onbuton ðone croft ðe Wynstan bylde. c1155						 (    Bounds (Sawyer 1555) in  S. E. Kelly Charters of Bath & Wells 		(2007)	 147  				To werbolde,  xl mæra oððe an foþer gyrda, oððe  viii geocu byld [perhaps read bylde],  iii ebban tyne. c1200						 (?OE)						    Grave 		(1890)	 l. 1  				Ðe wes bold ȝebyld, er þu iboren were. a1382    Bible 		(Wycliffite, E.V.)	 		(Bodl. 959)	 		(1959)	 Exod. xxiv. 4  				Moises..byldid anauter to þe lord, at þe rootis of þe hyll: & twelue tytlis: by twelue linagis of yrael. a1425						 (a1382)						    Bible 		(Wycliffite, E.V.)	 		(Corpus Oxf.)	 		(1850)	 3 Kings vii. 2  				He bildide the hows of the wijld wode of Liban. a1450						 (?c1421)						    J. Lydgate Siege Thebes 		(Arun.)	 		(1911)	 l. 1252  				A porche, bilt of square stonys. a1500						 (?c1450)						    Merlin iv. 63  				To beilde feire howsynge. 1610    P. Holland tr.  W. Camden Britain  i. 367  				The roufe aloft ybuilt Of Geat. 1644    J. Evelyn Mem. 		(1857)	 I. 75  				A castle builded on a very steep cliff. 1718    Lady M. W. Montagu Let. Sept. 		(1965)	 I. 437  				The Houses are tolerably well built. 1794    S. Williams Nat. & Civil Hist. Vermont 138  				When the Indian builded his house. 1859    F. Nightingale Notes on Nursing ii. 15  				Your house must be so built as that the outer air shall find its way..to every corner of it. 1883    Harper's Mag. Nov. 939/1  				550 miles of railroad had been built. 1956    A. Wilson Anglo-Saxon Attitudes 		(1958)	  i. i. 12  				A Ministry which wished to build a government factory on the site. 2002    P. Raines Simple Stonescaping 		(2003)	 iv. 35/1  				Jon said that before they put up a fence he wanted to grade and terrace the yard and build a stone wall and pond. 2012    Guardian 		(Nexis)	 25 Feb. 66 		(headline)	  				One architect managed to avoid the housing ladder altogether by designing and building his own home on the cheap.  b.  transitive. To initiate or undertake the construction of (a city or other settlement); to found or establish. Π c1275						 (?a1200)						    Laȝamon Brut 		(Calig.)	 		(1963)	 l. 1329  				He wolde bulden [c1300 Otho makie] twa burh. a1387    J. Trevisa tr.  R. Higden Polychron. 		(St. John's Cambr.)	 		(1865)	 I. 57  				He bulde [1480 Caxton bylded] Caunterbury þe chief citee of Kent. a1450						 (?c1421)						    J. Lydgate Siege Thebes 		(Arun.)	 		(1911)	 l. 187  				Worthy Thebees..Bylt and begonne of olde antiquite. 1526    W. Bonde Pylgrimage of Perfection  iii. sig. BBBiiiiv  				Jerico, Hay, & Gabaon, whiche the pagans buylded. 1655    T. Stanley Hist. Philos. I.  iii. 104  				The Lacedemonians..built a Town there. 1720    J. Strype Stow's Surv. of London 		(rev. ed.)	 I.  i. i. 7/1  				Nor is there any Reason to think the Romans built the City of London. 1873    Money Market 		(ed. 3)	 xii. 144  				Finance companies..undertake to supply cash for the most gigantic undertakings, to make railways, tunnel under mountains, build cities, [etc.] 1959    Chambers's Encycl. VIII. 41/2  				A new capital was built on the site of the present city of Kyoto. 2004    Independent 2 Jan.  i. 7/1  				His plans to build a village on the fringes of Britain's surfing capital..whipped up a storm of protest.  c.  transitive. To construct or make (a vehicle, device, or other object) by putting parts or materials together. Later also: to produce or manufacture (something) on a large scale by doing this.In early use typically with a ship or other vessel as object; cf. shipbuilding n. ΚΠ 1550    Langland's Vision of Pierce Plowman 		(new ed.)	 sig. ⚜.ii  				Accordynge to the example of them that builte Noes shippe, many of the preachers shall not be saued. 1651    Severall Proc. Parl. No. 123. 1910  				A Vessell..built at Swansey. 1754    S. Foote Knights  i. 4  				A Coach of his Grandfather's, built in the Year One. 1852    tr.  J. J. Seidel Organ & its Constr. 21  				In 1576, an organ with..a back-choir was built at Bernan. 1860    All Year Round 15 Sept. 545  				The taste of the day is for guns that are built, not cast. 1910    Washington Post 6 Nov.  iii. 2/3  				In 1910 this motor city built 100,000 automobiles. 1948    Proc. Symp. Large-scale Digital Calculating Machinery 1947 3  				A..project undertaken by Harvard University to build a computer. 1976    A. Davis Television 47  				Props departments that can build models of, say, spacecraft. 2020    Expert Rev. 		(Nexis)	 28 Mar.  				Build your flatpack furniture faster with the best electric screwdrivers from £20.  2.   a.  intransitive. To construct or erect a building or buildings; to engage in building as an activity, project, etc. Later also: to make a vehicle, model, etc., by putting parts or materials together. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > industry > building or constructing > build			[verb (intransitive)]		 buildc1275 edifyc1400 ?1316    Short Metrical Chron. 		(Royal)	 		(2002)	 l. 163  				To bulden he [sc. King Lud] heuede gode wate; At Londone he made a ȝate. 1483						 (    tr.  G. Deguileville Pilgrimage of Soul 		(Caxton)	  v. xiv. f. cviii  				Yf thou..arte a maister werker..couthest thou bilde withouten mater. 1576    N. Bacon in  A. H. Smith et al.  Papers N. Bacon of Stiffkey 		(1979)	 I. 196  				The masons tell me that building with calion, to bring up one pece after an other it w[ould] hardly be joyned without some daunger of cracck. 1664    B. Gerbier Counsel to Builders 		(new ed.)	  ii. 104  				All Owners..whether they Build or not. 1722    D. Defoe Jrnl. Plague Year 268  				The Ground was let out to build on. 1848    L. Hunt Jar of Honey iii. 33  				Building as if they were to live for ever. 1985    A. Blair Tea at Miss Cranston's xix, in  Miss Cranston's Omnibus 		(1998)	 161  				Bairns building with Lego. 2001    Guardian 9 June (Weekend Suppl.) 86/1  				This is the way to build, I thought: architecture without architects. 2022    Leicester Mercury 		(Nexis)	 20 Apr. 12  				North West Leicestershire District Council turned down a proposal last year to build on the same piece of land.  b.  intransitive. In the progressive with passive meaning: to be under construction, to be in the process of being built. Now chiefly historical (esp. in the context of shipbuilding). ΚΠ 1572    I. B. Let. to R. C. sig. F.iiv  				He dothe minde at his first landing, to..builde there his store house and houses of prouision,..and in the meane time that it is building and raising, to lodge all his men in campe. 1699    J. Wallis Let. 24 Oct. in  S. Pepys Diary & Corr. 		(1879)	 VI. 209  				The old Channel..for diverting the Thames whilst London Bridge was building. 1753    J. Warburton Vallum Romanum 95  				Most of them erected when Severus's wall was building. 1862    G. W. Thornbury Life J. M. W. Turner I. 199  				Five drawings of the abbey, then building. 1935    Rotarian Aug. 13/2  				A good matronly woman who showed people 'round the ark when it was building. 2014    B. Lavery Ship of Line 		(e-book ed.)	  				The ship was building in Pembroke Dock, but was not completed until 1858 after being fitted with a steam engine.  3.   a.  transitive. Of a bird: to construct (a nest). Also of certain other animals, e.g. beavers: to construct (a lodge, dam, or other structure). Also intransitive. ΘΠ the world > animals > by habitat > inhabit			[verb (intransitive)]		 > nest nesteOE buildc1275 nidify1656 nestlec1660 nidificate1814 nide1881 the world > animals > by habitat > inhabit			[verb (transitive)]		 > build or provide with nest innest1611 nestlec1660 nest1896 a1398    J. Trevisa tr.  Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum 		(BL Add. 27944)	 		(1975)	 I.  xii. ii. 603  				Sche buldeþ hire nest in fulle hiȝe rooches. c1400						 (?c1390)						    Sir Gawain & Green Knight 		(1940)	 l. 509  				Bryddeȝ busken to bylde, & bremlych syngen. c1475						 (c1399)						    Mum & Sothsegger 		(Cambr. Ll.4.14)	 		(1936)	  iii. l. 41 (MED)  				Þis brid be a bank bildith his nest. a1616    W. Shakespeare Antony & Cleopatra 		(1623)	  iv. xiii. 3  				Swallowes haue built In Cleopatra's Sailes their  nests.       View more context for this quotation 1661    R. Lovell Πανζωορυκτολογια, sive Panzoologicomineralogia 15  				[Beavers] gnaw down trees to build with. 1789    G. White Let. in  Nat. Hist. Selborne 109  				A pair of honey-buzzards..built them a large shallow nest. 1850    Ld. Tennyson In Memoriam cxiii. 178  				The happy birds, that change their sky To build and  brood.       View more context for this quotation 1978    Whig-Standard 		(Kingston, Ont.)	 1 Sept. 15/1  				Autumn is busy beaver..feverishly building food rafts in front of newly chinked lodges. It is muskrats building push-ups from bulrush plants. 2019    Times 20 Aug. 48/5  				A duck had built her nest and laid eggs in the nearby garden.  b.  transitive. To arrange or pile the fuel for (a fire), typically implying also lighting it.to build a fire under: see fire n. and int. Phrases 2e. Π 1544    P. Betham tr.  J. di Porcia Preceptes Warre  i. sig. B.viiv  				When the hoste of thyne enemyes is nere, good it is, to commaunde al the fewellers to buylde theyr fyres, the trompets blowe vp alarum, al the host to make an outcrye. a1754    E. Tollet Poems Several Occasions 		(1755)	 111  				On sevenfold Heaps he had to build the Pyre. 1792    Mass. Mag. Dec. 758/2  				A Mr Jabez Parsons..as building a fire in the house of Isaac Sheldon..and rolling a log on the fire, was unfortunately struck in his temples by the lever, which put a period to his existence. 1805    R. Southey Madoc  ii. iv. 214  				Fires are built before the tents. 1884    Harper's Mag. June 127/2  				He often built his own fire. 1986    J. Urquhart Whirlpool 		(1990)	 25  				She rearranged them into a square formation, into what her husband called the log cabin method of building a fire. 2009    B. O'Donoghue Ben's Barbecue 1  				I well remember going down to the beach on early-morning fishing expeditions with my friends, building a fire and throwing our fresh catch onto the coals.  c.  transitive. To make (a cake, pie, etc.); used esp. with reference to its size or structure. Also simply (colloquial or regional): to cook, prepare (a dish or meal). Π 1839    Burton's Gentleman's Mag. Mar. 144  				My dear mamma had built a cake about the size of a washing-tub. 1930    E. Ferber Cimarron xv. 232  				They built angel-food cakes whose basis was the whites of thirteen eggs. 1947    P. Newton Wayleggo 118  				The packie had built us a stew. 2020    Guardian 		(Nexis)	 14 Jan.  				It's a cracking mould to build a pie in, because it's so easy to remove the finished article from, and it guarantees you a gorgeous, high-sided, deep-filled pie.  d.  transitive. Esp. of a tailor: to make (clothing); to put together or fashion (a garment); also intransitive. Also: to make (shoes or boots). ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > tailoring or making clothes > tailor or make clothes			[verb (transitive)]		 shape?c1225 to make up1647 confection1839 build1840 tailor1856 the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > tailoring or making clothes > tailor or make clothes			[verb (intransitive)]		 shape?c1225 tailor1662 build1897 1840    R. H. Barham Spectre of Tappington in  Ingoldsby Legends 1st Ser. 22  				[The trousers] were cleverly ‘built’, of a light grey mixture. 1849    Lives Distinguished Shoemakers 245  				Fellow-craftsmen in the trade of building shoes. a1896    G. Du Maurier Martian 		(1897)	 183  				Is it still Skinner who builds for you? 1897    Globe 11 Mar. 3/4  				A tailor would..have had his work cut out for him to build that..chubby creature a costume. 1978    Field & Stream Aug. 58/1 		(advt.)	  				We've had nearly 100 years' experience building boots to protect your feet in warmth and comfort. 2018    Guardian 		(Nexis)	 17 Sept.  				I didn't know how to build a suit jacket, so I bought one and took it apart there and then.  e.  transitive. Computing. To construct (a program); spec. to process (source code or a program) into a form that can be installed and used on a computer system. Π 1963    Simulation Syst. Programming Design Man. (U.S. Naval Training Device Center Techn. Rep. 1089-1) 69  				We could build a program that automatically converts our language into binary and symbolic locations to absolute locations. 1989    Dr. Dobb's Jrnl. Sept. 60/3 		(advt.)	  				We take care to build the underlying POSIX kernel functionality or DOS and OS/2 into MKS software before moving utilities. 2005    Macworld 		(U.K. ed.)	 June 16/1  				This will help video and image editors, and may encourage developers to build networkable applications. 2016    H. Lowood  & R. Guins Debugging Game Hist. Contributors 433  				A transdisciplinary, interinstitutional research group that studies, teaches with, and builds computer games.  4.  transitive. figurative. To establish, develop, or construct (something abstract, such as a system of thought or belief, a reputation, a relationship, etc.), esp. incrementally or gradually.In early use typically with allusion to the notion of physical construction (see sense  1), which is weakened or absent in later use. ΘΚΠ the world > existence and causation > creation > 			[verb (transitive)]		 > construct > gradually buildc1440 c1405						 (c1395)						    G. Chaucer Summoner's Tale 		(Hengwrt)	 		(1872)	 l. 1977  				Al oure Couent To praye for yow is ay so diligent And for to buylden cristes owene chirche. 1589    G. Puttenham Arte Eng. Poesie  ii. xiii. 109  				Meetres..builded with polysillables. a1593    C. Marlowe Massacre at Paris 		(c1600)	 sig. D2  				Who will helpe to builde Religion? 1638    J. Milton Lycidas in  Obsequies 20 in  Justa Edouardo King  				He knew Himself to sing, and build the lofty rhyme. 1842    Ld. Tennyson Godiva in  Poems 		(new ed.)	 II. 115  				She..built herself an everlasting name. 1860    F. W. Farrar Ess. Origin Lang. i. 7  				Building systems before they had collected facts. 1939    Fortune Oct. 11/1 		(caption)	  				A million-dollar business was built. 1973    Evaluating Federal Effort to control Drug Abuse 		(U.S. Congr. House Comm. Govt. Operations Special Stud. Subcomm.)	  iv. 971  				Building the case to schedule a drug. 1986    F. G. Rodgers  & R. L. Shook IBM Way vii. 148  				It takes time and energy..to build a solid relationship with a customer. 2014    Guardian 31 Oct. 46/2  				The Outer Hebrides are quietly building a reputation as a place where rare American vagrants [i.e. birds] regularly turn up.  5.   a.  transitive. Of God or another divine being: to create or make (the world, a person, an animal, etc.); to bring into being. ΘΚΠ the world > existence and causation > creation > 			[verb (transitive)]		 > construct workOE dighta1175 to set upc1275 graitha1300 formc1300 pitchc1330 compoundc1374 to put togethera1387 performc1395 bigc1400 elementc1400 complexion1413 erect1417 framea1450 edifya1464 compose1481 construe1490 to lay together1530 perstruct1547 to piece together1572 condite1578 conflate1583 compile1590 to put together1591 to set together1603 draw1604 build1605 fabric1623 complicate1624 composit1640 constitute1646 compaginate1648 upa1658 complex1659 construct1663 structurate1664 structure1664 confect1677 to put up1699 rig1754 effect1791 structuralize1913 ?a1475    Ludus Coventriae 		(1922)	 38  				This..man whiche myn hand made and byldyd in blysse. 1605    J. Sylvester tr.  G. de S. Du Bartas Deuine Weekes & Wks.  i. vi. 192  				Beasts which thou this day did'st build. 1738    J. Wesley Coll. Psalms & Hymns 		(new ed.)	 cxxi. 1  				The Lord that built the Earth and Skies Is my perpetual Aid. 1847    R. W. Emerson Goethe in  Wks. 		(1906)	 I. 392  				The old Eternal Genius who built the world. 2005    W. Marder Indians in Americas viii. 112  				Their God..turned into a man and built the world through the power of his words.  b.   (a) transitive (in passive). To have a physique or build of a specified type. Cf. build n. 3, built adj. 3. Π 1642    T. Fuller Holy State  ii. v. 67  				His body was strongly built for the naturall temper, and well repair'd by his temperate diet and recreations. 1699    R. Bentley Diss. Epist. Phalaris 		(new ed.)	 54  				Built as it were to make a good Boxer. 1700    J. Dryden Chaucer's Palamon & Arcite  iii, in  Fables 69  				Such Bodies built for Strength, of equal Age, In Stature siz'd. 1820    L. Hunt Indicator 5 Apr. 207  				So built with muscle was his chest. 1864    R. D. Blackmore Clara Vaughan I.  i. xv. 122  				A man about fifty years old, of moderate stature, gauntly bodied, and loosely built. 1990    E. Harth Dawn of Millennium 		(1991)	 iii. 43  				They were powerfully built, with sloping foreheads and protruding brow ridges.  (b) transitive (in passive).  to be built like ——: to have a large or powerful physique or build, likened to that of an imposing or sturdy building, animal, etc.See also built like a brick shithouse at brick n.1 and adj.1 Phrases 5, built like a castle at castle n. 3g, built like a tank at tank n.7 Phrases. Π 1815    W. Scott Lord of Isles  iv. xxii. 158  				His stature, manly, bold, and tall, Built like a castle's battled wall. 1938    R. Wright Lawd Today! in  Early Wks. 		(1991)	  ii. iii. 154  				She was husky and built like a horse. 1986    R. Sproat Stunning the Punters 140  				Alf's a tasty geezer in a bundle on account of being so fast and together and built like a rhino. 2015    A. Mulligan Liquidator 58  				Big Jun, his bodyguard (who's built like a truck).  (c) transitive (in passive). colloquial (originally U.S.). With complement. To be temperamentally or psychologically disposed or inclined; to be of a specified character. Usually in negative contexts. ΚΠ 1876    W. M. Baker Carter Quarterman xv. 97/2  				Colonel Tom..says he wasn't built to be a shepherd over sheep. 1888    Missouri Republican 25 Jan. 6/5  				‘Why didn't you roll down?’ ‘I wasn't built that way.’ 1909    O. S. Wood in  Business Admin. 369  				All minds are not built for high-level thinking. Advertising must be simple. 1912    A. Bennett Matador of Five Towns & Other Stories 75  				I'm not built the same way myself. 1999    Campaign 		(Nexis)	 19 Mar.  				Film is a mixture of high-minded ideas and practical production problems... I thought I was built for it. 2009    D. O'Briain Tickling Eng. vi. 77  				An English crowd isn't built to accept good news like that.  c.  transitive. To compose or form (an organism, molecule, etc.); to cause (a natural or organic structure) to form, develop, or grow. Cf. earlier to build up 5a at  Phrasal verbs 1. Π 1821    C. Mackenzie One Thousand Exper. in Chem. viii. 181  				The crystal, in short, is, as it were, built of isomorphous molecules without any chemical affinity having a share in it, and without our being able to perceive fixed and determinate proportions. 1846    Farmer's Mag. Oct. 559/1  				The milk..contains every substance of which the body is built. 1873    Pop. Sci. Monthly Dec. 166  				Their [sc. plants] food must be decomposed in order to create the organic matter out of which all organisms are built. 1921    W. D. Harkins in  London, Edinb., & Dublin Philos. Mag. 6th Ser. 42 309  				Any complex atom has a mass and weight 0·76 per cent. less than the hydrogen atoms (neutrons) from which it may be assumed to be built. 1993    UCSD Perspectives 6 9/2  				Two other peroxisomal enzymes..help build molecules called alkyl ether phospholipids that scavenge the cell for harmful chemicals. 2007    G. Kroening Everything Kids' Snakes, Lizards, & Other Scaly Creatures Bk. 14  				While some proteins help build strong muscles.., keratin builds other handy body parts: claws, fingernails, fur, feathers, hair, horns, skin, and scales.  6.   a.  transitive. To make (a feeling, mood, quality, etc.) stronger or more intense; to cause to increase. Π 1901    Sunday Times Globe Jrnl. 		(Dubuque, Iowa)	 17 Nov. 		(Morning ed.)	 8/4  				It should be the business of all citizenship to cultivate, fortify, and build this loyalty to the home. 1971    B. Sidran Black Talk 		(1995)	 v. 139  				Bassist Wilbur Ware..superimposed chord substitutions, building the tension so that when he came back to the basics of the tune, it felt ‘like everything sucked in’. 2009    N.Y. Mag. 21 Sept. 58/1  				Trying to build interest and excitement any way they can.  b.  intransitive. Of a feeling, mood, quality, etc.: to become stronger or more intense; to increase. Π 1964    J. D. MacDonald Purple Place for Dying v. 72  				I could feel a terrible tension building in her. 1974    W. Oakley Rumpelstiltskin 5 		(stage direct.)	  				The noise builds, there is a black-out, and when the lights come up Rumpelstiltkin has appeared on top of box. 1998    Cruising World Oct. 70/1  				Despite the mal de mer, the excitement builds with each passing swell. 2013    S. Andrews Path of Emotions 		(e-book ed.)	  				When an emotion is felt but not listened to, the energy builds internally and causes agitation.  7.  intransitive. To live in a particular place; to take up one's abode, to dwell (also figurative). Also: to arise or appear in a particular place. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ society > inhabiting and dwelling > 			[verb (intransitive)]		 > establish residence wickc897 telda1325 buildc1340 nestlea1382 to take (up) one's inn (or inns)a1400 to hold (also keep, make, take, etc.) one's mansiona1425 to take one's lodgec1475 reside1490 inhabit1548 to settle one's rest1562 to sit down1579 to set up (or in) one's staff (of rest)1584 to set (up) one's rest1590 nest1591 to set down one's rest1591 roost1593 inherit1600 habituate1603 seat1612 to take up (one's) residencea1626 settle1627 pitch1629 fix1638 locate1652 to marry and settle1718 domesticate1768 domiciliate1815 to hang up one's hat1826 domicile1831 to stick one's stakes1872 homestead1877 to put down roots1882 to hang one's hat1904 localize1930 the world > existence and causation > causation > source or origin > originate, derive, or arise			[verb (intransitive)]		 arisec950 syeOE comeOE riselOE springc1175 buildc1340 derivec1386 sourdc1386 proceedc1390 becomea1400 to be descended (from, of)1399 bursta1400 to take roota1400 resolve?c1400 sourdre14.. springc1405 descenda1413 sprayc1425 well?a1475 depart1477 issue1481 provene1505 surmount1522 sprout1567 accrue?1576 source1599 dimane1610 move1615 drill1638 emane1656 emanate1756 originate1758 to hail from1841 deduce1866 inherita1890 stem1932 c1275						 (?a1200)						    Laȝamon Brut 		(Calig.)	 		(1978)	 l. 14808  				Sone uolc gadere[de] to Austin þan gode..and bi-gunnen þer to bulden bi þan watere. c1400						 (?c1390)						    Sir Gawain & Green Knight 		(1940)	 l. 25  				Of alle þat here bult of Bretaygne kynges Ay watȝ Arthur þe hendest. a1500    in  Englische Studien 		(1890)	 14 402  				Þe holy goste will in the byldon. 1543						 (    Chron. J. Hardyng 		(1812)	 98  				Galerius had the este there into bylde. a1592    R. Greene Comicall Hist. Alphonsus 		(1599)	  iv. sig. G1  				A blister build upon that traitors tongue!  III.  To make or promote religious or spiritual progress. Cf. the similar semantic development at edify v.  8.  intransitive. To become stronger in faith or virtue; to promote religious or spiritual development. Also (esp. in later use): to advance (esp. gradually or incrementally) to or toward(s) a particular spiritual reward or punishment (typically heaven or hell). Cf. edify v. 3. In later use usually influenced by sense  2a.Cf. also to build up 3 at  Phrasal verbs 1.				 [In to build towards hell (see quots. c1443,  1980) after post-classical Latin omne, quod contra conscientiam fit, edificat ad gehennam everything that is done against conscience builds towards hell (12th cent. in Gratian  Decretum 28. 1. 4).]			 Π c1300    St. Mary Magdalen 		(Laud)	 l. 306 in  C. Horstmann Early S.-Eng. Legendary 		(1887)	 471  				Huy leten heore vuele dedes..And aftur godes dedes huy wrouȝhten a[nd] gonne buylde. c1443    R. Pecock Reule of Crysten Religioun 		(1927)	 166  				As holy writt seiþ, ‘who euer dooþ aȝens his conscience, he bildiþ to helward.’ 1526    Bible 		(Tyndale)	 Acts xx. 32  				I commende you to God and to the worde of his grace which is able to bylde further [1611 to build you vp]. 1526    W. Bonde Pylgrimage of Perfection  ii. sig. Kvi  				That..they may meryt & buylde to their crowne in heuen. 1674    J. Goodman Serious Inq. Neglect Protestant Relig. sig. B3v  				Then all the Professors of Christianity had one heart and one lip, and then they built towards Heaven in a good sense. 1883    Bangor 		(Maine)	 Daily Whig & Courier 19 Dec.  				The more we reflect upon and discuss great moral questions, the higher we build toward Heaven. 1980    D. J. Rose in  R. L. Shinn Faith & Sci. in Unjust World xiii. 252  				The nature of man himself who, being given free will, can choose to build towards heaven or towards hell. Phrases P1.    to be built for comfort, not for speed and variants.  a.   Of a thing (originally and esp. a boat or other vehicle): to be designed and constructed so as to be comfortable rather than fast. Later also in extended use: to offer security or reliability but lack excitement or efficiency. Π 1868    N.Y. Herald 12 May 4/4  				She is a first rate sea boat, and being built more for comfort than speed has capital accommodations on board. 1905    Motor Way 28 Sept. 41 		(advt.)	  				Rambler [motor car]... Occupants thoroughly protected from storms by full canopy top... Built for comfort—not for speed. 1917    Dial 11 Oct. 334/1  				Democratic governments learn only by trial and error... Democracies are built for comfort, not for speed. 2011    R. Barton Cycling Bible 		(2015)	 i. 30/1  				Touring bikes are built for comfort not speed. Their frames are often made from steel... Steel..[has] a bit more ‘give’, making for a less boneshaking ride over unmade roads. 2019    Sc. Daily Mail 		(Nexis)	 16 Feb. 108  				The shares already have some high expectations... it's a solid, well-run business. It's more of a Mondeo than a Maserati, but some stocks are built for comfort, not speed.  b.   Of a person: to prefer or be more suited to comfort and ease rather than exercise, excitement, or a challenge; (sometimes euphemistically) overweight, fat. Π 1911    San Francisco Examiner 6 Feb. 7/3  				She was built for comfort, not speed, he tells you. She is so large that the only thing she can get ready-made is a handkerchief. 1934    Washington Post 28 Apr. 9/1  				He is headed for a ‘realm of cooperative plenty’. Hot dog..! If it were not for the fact that I am built for comfort instead of speed I would have joined him. 1960    W. Dixon Built for Comfort 		(sheet music)	  				Don't call me fat Cause I'm built for comfort I ain't built for speed. 2022    Toronto Sun 		(Web ed.)	 		(Nexis)	 19 Jan.  				When I was a teenage girl with a ‘sturdy’ body type, my father..often remarked that I was, ‘built for comfort, not for speed’... To all dads of teenage girls, please, be sparing with those ‘light teasing’ remarks.  P2.    to build bridges: to facilitate communication or reconciliation; to encourage or bring about friendly relations between different or opposing groups. Frequently with between, to. Cf. bridge-building n. 2. ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > dissent > absence of dissension or peace > bringing about concord or peace > bring to peace (strife or discord)			[verb (transitive)]		 > reconcile (people) seema1000 saughtc1000 saughtela1122 accordlOE i-sehtnec1175 saughtenc1175 to bring, make, set at onec1300 peasec1300 reconcilec1390 corda1400 pacifyc1500 agree1530 reconciliate1539 gree1570 atone1597 compose1597 even1620 to build bridges1886 society > society and the community > dissent > absence of dissension or peace > bringing about concord or peace > bring to peace (strife or discord)			[verb (transitive)]		 > mediate between to go between ——lOE mean1440 mediate1538 to build bridges1886 1875    Glasgow Herald 8 Apr. 7/1  				He thought they should give encouragement to all that tended to broaden—to build bridges rather than to raise walls. 1886    G. P. Fisher Catholicity, True & False 24  				To soften the asperities of intellectual strife, and to build bridges between discordant sections of the Christian family. 1907    Times 10 Oct. 3/3  				Undeterred by the failure of previous efforts to build bridges for the opponents of obligatory arbitration. 1969    Life 11 Apr. 36/1  				The U.S. has tried to ‘build bridges’ to the U.S.S.R., while too often appearing determined to burn all Western bridges to China. 2002    Time Out N.Y. 31 Oct. 6/1  				One of the primary goals is to build bridges between the GLBT and Poly communities.  P3.   Originally U.S. Followed by an infinitive or to and a noun, forming adjectival phrases designating or relating to something (esp. a house, building, etc.) made or constructed in accordance with that which is specified by the verb or noun, as in  build-to-order,  build-to-sell,  build-to-suit,  build-to-specification, etc. Cf. built adj. Phrases. Π 1911    Ohio Architect, Engineer & Builder Jan. 72/2  				He is often hampered by..the allotment man whose ‘build to sell’..policy has no regard for any one but himself. 1950    Daily Independent Jrnl. 		(San Rafael, Calif.)	 20 May 8/2 		(advt.)	  				Ideal settings for build-to-order homes among stately laurels and mammoth oaks. 1968    Philadelphia Inquirer 22 Aug. 45/3  				Several locations available on a build to suit basis. 2018    FD Wire 		(Nexis)	 2 May  				[These capabilities] will enhance..[their] ability to provide build-to-specification products.  P4.   to be built on sand: see sand n.2 2b. Rome was not built in a day: see Rome n. Phrases 1b. Phrasal verbs PV1.   With adverbs in specialized senses.  to build down   1.  transitive. To reduce (something, esp. a group or set) in size or quantity gradually or systematically.With quot. 1983   cf. build-down n. ΘΠ the world > relative properties > quantity > decrease or reduction in quantity, amount, or degree > reduce in quantity, amount, or degree			[verb (transitive)]		 > reduce gradually to wane away1601 wear1697 wean1707 whittle1736 to tail off (out)1827 to ease off1884 to taper off (away, down)1898 to run down1960 to wind down1969 1872    Missouri Dental Jrnl. Aug. 315  				I..then proceeded to build down the tooth a little more than its former size and length. 1983    USA Today 4 Oct. 1  				President Reagan will announce today that he'll offer to ‘build-down’ the USA's nuclear weapons when deadlocked strategic arms talks with the Soviets resume. 1992    New Republic 27 Apr. 12/1  				He wants to build down U.S. forces at a moderate pace, and he does not want Congress forcing him to go faster. 2017    M-brain Norway News 		(Nexis)	 10 Jan. 6  				The need to build down the stocks of cheese made it necessary to reduce milk production, and as a market regulator, Tine asked for the milk quota for cow milk to be reduced by 2%.  2.  intransitive. U.S. Cards. Esp. in games of patience: to place a card on one of the next highest denomination, e.g. a five on a six. Cf. to build up 7 at  Phrasal verbs 1. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > card game > play at cards			[verb (intransitive)]		 > actions or tactics pass1599 pluck1606 pulla1625 to play high1640 to follow suit1643 to play at forsat1674 lead1677 overdrawc1805 stand1813 retract1823 underplay1850 to hold up1879 to throw in one's hand1893 build1901 build-down1983 1894    Outlook 20 Oct. 629/1  				Upon the intervening spaces, the cards being arranged in a square of nine, build down. 1901    Munsey's Mag. Mar. 871/2  				To build down..is to place a card upon one of the next higher denomination... To build up..is to do just the opposite—that is, to place an eight on a seven. 2019    P. Anthony Zombie Lover 		(e-book ed.)	  				You can build down from any card in the tableau, like putting that red four on that black five.   transitive. Originally: to enclose (something) by building. Hence: to incorporate as an integral part of a building or other structure; (figurative) to make (something) an inherent, integral, or permanent characteristic or element of something else.Chiefly as past participle; cf. built-in adj. ΘΠ the world > relative properties > wholeness > incompleteness > part of whole > be (part of)			[verb (transitive)]		 > be the or a component(s) of > introduce as a component part ingredience1650 in-build1856 1845    Law Jrnl. Rep. 14  ii. Court Exchequer Pleas 174/1  				The boilers of the engine were..built in and surrounded by flues of brickwork. 1933    Telegr. & Teleph. Jrnl. 19 151/1  				In New York telephones are ‘built-in’ and when you become a tenant..you 'phone as often as you like. 1965    Listener 4 Nov. 687/1  				The legacy of those years has been built in to the domestic and foreign policies of both countries. 2004    Independent 		(Compact ed.)	 20 Apr. (Review section) 13/1  				Prototype hospitals whose obsolescence was built in. 2022    Newstex Blogs 		(Nexis)	 8 Apr.  				The king-sized bed is built-in and custom-made to accommodate the wooden truss behind it.  1.   a.  transitive. To enlarge or expand (a settlement, etc.) by building; (also) to construct (an architectural feature) so that it protrudes or extends from a wall, etc. ΘΠ society > occupation and work > industry > building or constructing > build or construct			[verb (transitive)]		 > build outwards jetty1438 jet1632 outbuild1847 c1384    Bible 		(Wycliffite, E.V.)	 		(Douce 369(2))	 		(1850)	 1 Macc. x. 45  				For to bilde out the wallis of Jerusalem; and for to make stronge in cumpas, spensis shuln be ȝouen of the kyngus resoun. 1611    R. Cotgrave Dict. French & Eng. Tongues  				Trompe, a closet, or such a like roome, built out of a wall with a hanging bottome. 1812    M. Edgeworth Absentee xi, in  Tales Fashionable Life II. 178  				A little skreen of white-washed wall, built out into the room, for the purpose of keeping those who sat at the fire from the blast of the door. 1852    N.-Y. Daily Times 16 Oct. 3/4  				These columns..were built with such rapidity that the iron caps were put on, and the architrave built out, before the mortar had become dry and firm. 1993    Collins Compl. DIY Man. 		(new ed.)	 iii. 214/2  				A bay window is a combination of window frames built out from the face of the building. 2012    B. K. Parent Journey's Middle lxix. 458  				They built the town out from the harbor in a horseshoe shape.  b.  transitive. figurative. To construct or develop (a system of thought, a belief, etc.) from a particular starting point or around a certain concept. Π 1849    Amer. Rev. Jan. 73/2  				The Idealists..begin with the consciousness of existence, and from that point build out a system of thought which shall explain the universe. 1902    W. James Varieties Relig. Experience xx. 514  				We..build out our religion in the way most congruous with our personal susceptibilities. 1972    W. Morris Toward New Historicism x. 187  				It is in response to the apparent dead end of new critical organic theory that he wants to build out a new historicism. 2018    M. K. Gugerty  & D. Karlan Goldilocks Challenge 		(e-book ed.)	 iii  				In an ideal world, organizations..would map backward to identify strategies to address that challenge,..and then build out a theory of change before implementing their program.  2.  transitive. To obstruct or block (a view, light, etc.) by building; (also) to exclude or eliminate by building. Π 1830    Edinb. Lit. Jrnl. 5 June 328/2  				An army of bricklayers is summoned, who raise the wall, and build out the Prince's view. 1848    C. Dickens Dombey & Son lvii.  				No gracious ray of light is seen to fall on Florence, kneeling at the altar with her timid head bowed down. The Morning luminary is built out, and don't shine there. 1853    C. Brontë Villette I. xii. 205  				The ghost must have been built out some ages ago, for there were houses all round now. 2013    Advertiser 		(Austral.)	 		(Nexis)	 9 Oct.  				It's impossible to build out the view and you'll always have that view over the bay to Boston Island.  3.   a.  transitive. To use up all available building space in (a place). Cf. buildout n. 1a. Π 1946    Cumberland Argus & Fruitgrowers' Advocate 		(Parramatta, New S. Wales)	 30 Oct. 5/1  				It would be a pity if this land was built out, as the people down there have had a wonderful playing area for years. 1992    Chicago Tribune 22 Nov.  xvi. 1/6  				The suburbs are about built out. This is the future of shopping center development. 2017    Courier Mail 		(Nexis)	 6 May (Commercial Property section) 62  				It's set to go from what was an undeveloped area two years ago to being totally built out over the next five to seven years.  b.  transitive. To complete (a manufacturing project); to produce or deliver (products, esp. vehicles) after completion of such a project. Cf. buildout n. 1b. Π 1954    N.Y. Times 6 Aug. 24/3  				During the third quarter we will build out our 1954 models, take our annual inventory and change over our plans to make ready for our new model production. 2021    Yourstory.in 		(Nexis)	 3 Dec.  				Technology to build out the line of electric scooters.  c.  transitive. To expand (an aspect of a business); to meet or fulfil the potential or capacity of (a commercial activity or sector). Π 1989    Financial Times 8 June (Survey section) p. iii/5  				That makes a US location attractive because it offers the opportunity for building out their customer base by seeking US OEM (original equipment manufacturer) business. 1993    Science 24 Sept. 1788/2  				We're going full speed ahead to build out our current capabilities and expand in certain areas. 2011    Wall St. Jrnl. 12 Sept.  r2/3  				Leaders should..unleash the entrepreneurial energies of our metropolitan engines to build out the clean economy.  1.  transitive. To undertake the building of (a city or other settlement); to construct, put up (a building or other structure); = main senses  1a,   1b. Later also more specifically: to construct (a new or improved building or structure) after demolition or a period of deterioration; to rebuild. Also intransitive.In quot. 1841   intransitive in the progressive with passive meaning (cf. sense  2b). ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > industry > building or constructing > build or construct			[verb (transitive)]		 timbera900 workOE betimberOE craftOE buildc1275 lifta1300 stagec1330 upraise1338 wright1338 edifya1340 to make outa1382 to make upa1382 biga1400 housea1400 risea1400 telda1400–50 to work upa1450 redress1481 levy1495 upmake1507 upbuild1513 exstruct?c1550 construct1663 to run up1686 practise1739 to lay up1788 elevate1798 to put up1818 to lay down1851 practicate1851 c1325						 (c1300)						    Chron. Robert of Gloucester 		(Calig.)	 l. 1537  				Þe king..let bulde vp grete tounes, þat were ney adoun ivalle. 1490    W. Caxton tr.  Boke yf Eneydos lxv. sig. Lviv  				And of thys cyte ben many in doubte who buylde it vppe. c1540						 (?a1400)						    Gest Historiale Destr. Troy 		(2002)	 f. 26  				He..byld vp a bygge towne of þe bare vrthe. 1611    Bible 		(King James)	 2 Chron. xxxii. 5  				Hezekiah built up the wall that was broken. 1676    in  D. W. Prowse Hist. Newfoundland 		(1895)	 viii. 205/2  				Capt. Russell forc'd several Masters of shipps..to build up again their trayne houses, themselves had cut down contrary to their order. 1808    Times 22 Sept.  				Government are expending..great sums in pulling down and building up. 1841    G. Catlin Lett. N. Amer. Indians II. xlvi. 95  				A very pretty little town, building up. 1936    A. Gatti Great Mother Forest vii. 87  				Every place where there are hotels.., we are doing our best to improve them. Where they cannot be afforded yet, we build up rest-houses. 2004    Edmonton 		(Alberta)	 Jrnl. 		(Nexis)	 4 Apr.  a1  				We were planning a couple of years ago to buy some lot, build up a house.  2.  figurative.  a.  transitive. To establish, construct, or develop (something) incrementally or gradually. Also: to intensify or increase gradually or to a high level.With quots. 1529,  1567 cf. to build upon —— 1 at  Phrasal verbs 2. In early use often with allusion to the notion of physical construction (see sense  1). ΘΠ the world > relative properties > quantity > increase in quantity, amount, or degree > 			[verb (transitive)]		 > increase temperature, volume, etc. to build up1936 to turn up1962 1529    T. More Supplyc. Soulys  ii. f. xxix  				Men abydyng vppon criste & hys very lyuely fayth bylde vp theruppon such good workys as are so good & so pure yt they be lyke fyne gold. 1567    J. Jewel Def. Apol. Churche Eng.  ii. 198  				Upon these fewe woordes, M. Hardinge is hable to builde vp his Dimi Communion, his Priuate Masse. 1647    H. Parker Cordiall Answered sig. A 2v  				That lawyer..ought to roote himself deeper, before he begins to build up his argument. 1726    R. Wodrow Corr. 		(1843)	 III. 269  				I rejoice that the Lord is building up your family. 1814    W. Wordsworth Excursion  iv. 197  				So build we up the Being that we  are.       View more context for this quotation 1863    A. P. Stanley Lect. Jewish Church I. iii. 62  				His fortunes were built up. 1892    Engineer 22 Jan. 65/3  				In a few seconds the field is built up to its maximum strength. 1935    Mod. Philol. 33 34  				Seneca's ghosts present a series of terrible images for the single end of building up the horror. 1940    Illustr. London News 196 188/2  				A theatre which has built up a reputation as a repertory with a first-rate team. 1994    Film Focus Dec. 55/3  				Tarantino's script and Scott's direction build up the tension to such a degree that you're almost aching for the pay-off. 2015    Radio Times 20 June 		(South/West ed.)	 95/3  				Alicia struggles to build up a new legal business.  b.   (a) intransitive. To develop, grow, or form gradually or incrementally; (also) to become stronger or more intense; to increase. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > quantity > increase in quantity, amount, or degree > 			[verb (intransitive)]		 > in intensity or degree waxc897 reforce1490 rise1594 fortify1605 strengthena1616 harden1625 intend1655 thicken1672 exasperate1742 intensify1853 thick1879 to hot up1922 to build up1936 1681    Bp. G. Burnet Serm. preached on Fast-day 39  				A superstitious and bloody Princess, who..corrupted the great Men, and the Publick Councils of the Kingdom; so that all that had been building up in twenty five years, was overthrown. 1883    R. Bunn King Henry V 13  				That character grows and develops, builds up, from a suitable and proper foundation. 1884    N. S. Keith  & P. Neymann tr.  H. Schellen Magneto-electric & Dynamo-electric Machines I.  iii. 118  				The magnetism builds up, in spite of the intermittent character of the currents. 1936    Discovery July 222/2  				The sound builds up from silence to strength. 1956    A. L. Rowse Early Churchills ii. 22  				Such was the spirit that was building up on either side in this deplorable war. 1968    Listener 5 Dec. 774/2  				A further tension builds up between the desire to create space and the desire to fill it. 2014    Observer 23 Mar. 46/3  				A large debt has built up as a result.  (b) intransitive. With to. Of a sequence of events, performance, etc.: to lead up to a climactic or exciting point with increasing intensity. Of a person or group: to prepare gradually for a significant action or event; to work up to doing something. Cf. build-up n. 2b. Π 1876    St. Louis 		(Missouri)	 Globe-Democrat 18 Apr. 4/3  				The second act is much better, the comic element introduced into it adding to its interest, and the third act builds up to a climax, both musical and dramatic. 1932    Alpha Phi Q. Sept. 396/2  				It is all building up to those wonderful three days in September which are Washburn's rush week. 1942    R. Haig-Brown Timber 		(1993)	 xxiii. 345  				You acted kind of simple, calling a meeting cold that way. You should have built up to it gradual with meetings on the quiet. 2004    Independent 21 June (Review section) 4/1  				Now that he'd started, he could not stop. He was either building up to a big confession or having me on. 2006    New Yorker 11 Dec. 94/3  				The documentary verisimilitude also allowed scenes to peter out with a blank look or a sigh rather than build up to the American joke-joke-joke crescendo.  c.  transitive. Originally U.S. To create or develop a positive public image for (a person); to bolster the reputation of, to promote. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > esteem > reputation > good repute > gain credit by			[verb (transitive)]		 > establish or enhance a person's reputation to build up1935 1839    Columbus 		(Georgia)	 Sentinel & Herald 3 Oct. 2/3  				It is not, nor has it been our purpose, by slander and detraction, to pull down Mr. Smith that we may build up our candidate, Col. Lewis. 1935    S. Lewis It can't happen Here ix. 88  				Sarason had, as it was scientifically called, been ‘building up’ Senator Windrip for seven years before his nomination as President. 1944    A. Jacob Traveller's War xii. 213  				He set out to build himself up in the eyes of an army that had tasted defeat. 2015    Swimming Times Apr. 78/1  				The British press..were waiting for me to fail. In this country we are fantastic at building up our athletes or film stars or whoever—but building them up and building them up and waiting until something goes wrong and then we pull their wings off.  3.  transitive. To strengthen (a person, a soul, etc.) in faith or virtue; to be of spiritual benefit to; = edify v. 3a. Cf. main sense  8. ΘΠ society > faith > aspects of faith > spirituality > be or cause to be spiritual			[verb (transitive)]		 > instruct or improve bindc975 confirma1300 enhancec1325 edify1340 exhancea1450 enlightena1500 build1526 mounta1546 spiritualize1596 sanctify1597 1532    T. More Confut. Tyndales Answere  i. p. xxxv  				Yt wyll be great besynes and mych a do to edyfye and buyld vp the soules of such a sorte, which the deuyll hathe by the blaste of his mouth throwen downe so depe and frusshed all to fytters. 1611    Bible 		(King James)	 Acts xx. 32  				I commend you to God, and to the word of his grace, which is able to build you vp, and to give you an inheritance among all them which are sanctified. a1633    W. Ames Substance Christian Relig. 		(1659)	 xxxi. 197  				This servantship or Ministry is a moral meanes of building up and confirming the faithfull. 1710    J. Norris Treat. Christian Prudence v. 202  				To build up men in Faith and Holiness of Life, that which we properly mean by Edification. 1853    Edinb. Christian Mag. 4 327/2  				Family worship..builds up in the faith, and refreshes the spirit of those who are well-informed. 2015    R. Graham  & M. L. Graham Raising God's Girl 		(e-book ed.)	  				I know that my parent's correction is meant to build me up in Christ, not tear me down.  4.  transitive. With into. To assemble or put together (parts or materials) in order to construct something; to work up or make (raw materials or a basic component) into a finished form or product. Cf. to build into —— 1 at  Phrasal verbs 2.In quot. a1626   in figurative context. Π a1626    A. Lake Serm. St. Maries Oxf. 127 in  Sermons 		(1629)	  				Know you not (saith he) that your bodyes are the Temples of the Holy Ghost? So that no question can be made of either part of our person, both are liuing stones, and built vp into a Spirituall House. 1758    W. Borlase Nat. Hist. Cornwall viii. 88  				We make all our corn into arrish-mows, the sheaves being built up into a regular, solid cone. 1851    Knight's Excursion Compan. ix. 9  				The immensely long pieces of timber destined to be built up into the form of a mast. 1982    JET Joint Undertaking 		(ECSC/EEC/EURATOM)	 8  				The eight inner poloidal field coils were built up into a stack. 2013    Financial Times 13 Apr. (Weekend Suppl.) 48/3  				I was back in the studio with Marr, to lacquer the frame and build it up into a complete bicycle.  5.   a.  transitive. To compose or form (a natural structure or organism); to cause (such a structure) to develop or grow. Cf. sense  5c. Π 1697    ‘Philaret’ Challenge iii. 29  				That which is Redundant, or Deficient, is said to be Monstrous or deform'd, not that 'tis so in it self, but in respect of its deviation from the common Standard, that nature proposes to its self to build up the Body of Man in. 1843    J. A. Smith Product. Farming 137  				Hence the reason why bodies can be nourished and built up upon food comparatively poor in nitrogen. 1860    J. Tyndall Glaciers of Alps  i. §1. 2  				An amethyst is a crystal built up from particles of silica. 1922    T. M. Lowry Inorg. Chem. xxxi. 550  				His theory that atoms are built up of electrons arranged in shells around a central nucleus. 2022    Daily Monitor 		(Nexis)	 21 Mar.  				Stretching builds up muscle, increases flexibility, and promotes circulation.  b.  intransitive. Of a substance, deposit, etc.: to accumulate, collect; to increase in amount or extent. Π 1863    Notes & Queries 19 Dec. (end matter) 		(advt.)	  				Holloway's Ointment..builds up from the bottom of the wound with sound and healthy granulations. 1895    Proc. 4th Ann. Meeting Amer. Internat. Assoc. Railway Superintendents 62  				Thick paints..should be avoided, as they scale up from the iron, and rust underneath builds up. 1910    S. G. Camp Fishing Kits & Equipm. v. 59  				See that the spool is narrow so that, when reeling in, the line will build up on the reel rapidly. 1991    S. Gibson  & R. Gibson Homoeopathy for Everyone 		(new ed.)	 viii. 120  				These chemicals tend to build up in the soil and are absorbed by our food plants. 2022    Newstex Blogs 		(Nexis)	 11 Apr.  				Vacuuming frequently on areas that receive more footfall will help to stop dirt building up and getting trodden into your floor.  6.  transitive. To obstruct or block (a doorway, window, etc.) by building.Cf. to board up at board v. 7a, to brick up 2 at brick v. Phrasal verbs. Π 1700    Flying Post 19 Sept.  				Our Magistrates have built up the Gate on the North-side of the City, called, The New Port. 1850    Amer. Whig. Rev. Dec. 646/2  				Individual Irish families have built up the doors and windows of their houses, converted them into overground vaults, and died therein of want and cold. 2015    Notes & Rec. Royal Soc. 69 123  				Orders were given for the ‘iron stenchers’ to be removed from the windows of the lower storey and the windows built up with stone and lime.  7.  intransitive. U.S. Cards. Esp. in games of patience: to place a card on one of the next lowest denomination, e.g. a six on a five. Cf. to build down 2 at  Phrasal verbs 1. ΘΠ society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > card game > play at cards			[verb (intransitive)]		 > actions or tactics pass1599 pluck1606 pulla1625 to play high1640 to follow suit1643 to play at forsat1674 lead1677 overdrawc1805 stand1813 retract1823 underplay1850 to hold up1879 to throw in one's hand1893 build1901 build-down1983 1868    W. B. Dick Mod. Pocket Hoyle 179  				When a player cannot, or does not choose to pair, combine, or build up, he must place a card upon the board face upwards. 1901    Munsey's Mag. Mar. 871/2  				To build down..is to place a card upon one of the next higher denomination... To build up..is to do just the opposite—that is, to place an eight on a seven. 2004    F. Parodi Big Bk. Solitaire 184  				Build up on the Ace regardless of suit, placing another Ace on top after you reach the King.  PV2.   With prepositions in specialized senses.  to build into ——   1.  transitive. To work up or make (raw materials or a basic component) into (a finished form or product); to assemble or put together (parts or materials) in order to construct (something). Also figurative. Cf. to build up 4 at  Phrasal verbs 1. ΘΚΠ the world > existence and causation > creation > 			[verb (transitive)]		 > fashion, shape, or form > work up edify1382 builda1425 to erect into1670 manufacture1683 society > occupation and work > industry > building or constructing > build or construct			[verb (transitive)]		 > build or construct by fitting parts together reareOE raisec1175 build1884 a1425						 (c1395)						    Bible 		(Wycliffite, L.V.)	 		(Royal)	 		(1850)	 Gen. ii. 22  				The Lord God bildide the rib..in to a womman. 1629    T. Hobbes tr.  Thucydides Eight Bks. Peloponnesian Warre  iii. 155  				That sixteene foot of space which was betwixt them [sc. walls], was disposed and built into Cabines for the Watchmen. 1725    D. Defoe New Voy. round World  i. 109  				A great heavy Boat, which..seem'd to have been a large Ship's long Boat, built into a Kind of Yatch. 1884    Manch. Examiner 18 Sept. 4/6  				He collects the spoils of many sessions..like a skilful architect, builds them into a fair and seemly edifice. 1925    E. Sitwell Poetry & Crit. 23  				Miss Stein..breaks down the predestined groups of words..and builds them into new and vital shapes. 2006    R. A. W. Rhodes et al.  Oxf. Handbk. Polit. Inst. xix. 367  				When Moses organized the tribes of Israel for their departure from Pharaoh's rule, he organized them into a simple bureaucracy as he sought to build them into a new nation.  2.   a.  transitive. To incorporate (something) as an integral part or component of (a structure, manufactured object, etc.). Π 1687    A. Lovell tr.  J. de Thévenot Trav. into Levant  i. v. 133  				The Roof of it is flat, consisting of Nine Stones,..the other two at each end, appear not to be above two Foot broad a piece, but the reason is because the other half of them is built into the Wall. 1808    W. Scott Marmion Notes p. lxxvi  				The Hare Stane, a high stone, now built into the wall, on the left hand of the high way leading towards Braid. 1879    Spons' Encycl. Manuf. I. 290  				The hopper..is built into the arch. 1956    A. H. Compton Atomic Quest 326  				Better control of the amount of rubber that is built into tires. 2022    Spy 		(Nexis)	 26 Apr.  				The interior storage space is large and there's a child safety hinge built into the lid to keep it from slamming shut.  b.  transitive. figurative. To make (something) an inherent, integral, or permanent characteristic or element of (something else). Π 1854    Fife Herald 1 June  				Great iniquity must be built into the present system. 1874    Fortn. Rev. Dec. 730  				By that process of Natural Selection all the actions of our ancestors are built into us and form our character. 1954    Milbank Memorial Fund Q. 32 388  				Two types of data loss are built into this present analysis. 1996    M. D. Russell Sparrow xv. 140  				They were all being cross-trained, to build redundancy into the final crew of eight. 2019    Oxf. Mail 		(Nexis)	 21 Sept.  				A reduction in cars on our roads will create a better environment for people to be able to build physical activity into their daily lives.  1.  transitive. To found or develop (something abstract, such as a system of thought or belief, an argument, a reputation, etc.) on (a basis); to base or ground (something) on. ΘΚΠ the world > existence and causation > causation > initiating or causing to begin > initiate			[verb (transitive)]		 > found or establish > in or on something to stand on ——eOE fastc1275 found1390 to stand upon ——a1393 build1528 relya1633 found1667 base1776 premise1881 1562    J. Veron Stronge Battery Inuoc. Saintes f. 58v  				It was the Lordes Instytution, buylded on his woorde, and thorough faythe obeyed of the Hebrewes. 1658    R. Allestree Pract. Christian Graces; or, Whole Duty of Man x. §1. 206  				I shall..build all the particular duties..on those two general ones. 1689    J. Locke Two Treat. Govt.  i. ix. 87  				Sovereignty built on ‘property’..comes to nothing. 1711    J. Addison Spectator No. 253. ¶4  				The Fame that is built on Candour and Ingenuity. 1781    J. Moore View Soc. Italy 		(1790)	 I. vii. 70  				The independence of Venice was not built on usurpation. 1837    J. H. Newman Parochial Serm. 		(ed. 3)	 I. vi. 90  				A Christian's faith and obedience is built on all this. 1987    Wall St. Jrnl. 4 June 16 		(advt.)	  				Our reputation has been built on solid repeat business. 2020    Malay Mail 		(Nexis)	 30 Apr.  				He builds his argument on fake news and videos posted by cyber troopers on social media.  2.  intransitive. To use (something) as a basis for a belief, argument, etc., or for further development. Also (esp. in early use): to rely on, have confidence in (cf. to build upon —— 2 at  Phrasal verbs 2).Sometimes with allusion to the notion of physical construction (see sense  2a), esp. in early use. Π 1563    Bp. J. Pilkington Burnynge of Paules Church sig. H.iiiv  				Because we say and proue oure faithe and relygion to bee the best and auncienst, we bylde not on counsels as they doe, but on Goddds [sic] worde, which is aboue the counsel. 1594    T. Lodge Wounds Ciuill War  iii. i. sig. D3v  				The trustfull man that builds on trothles vowes. a1616    W. Shakespeare Henry IV, Pt. 2 		(1623)	  i. iii. 89  				An habitation giddy, and vnsure Hath he that buildeth on the vulgar heart. 1756    Satirical Rev. Manifold Falshoods conc. Earthquake 84  				The raw unprovable Hypotheses, which certain modern reasoners build on. 1816    Eclectic Rev. Jan. 27  				An attempt to build on other foundations than these, we cannot but apprehend would be weakening the evidence of truth. 1983    Sci. Amer. Feb. 41/1  				One then builds on the result of the classical calculation by correcting it for quantum-mechanical fluctuations. 2005    Dunoon Observer & Argyllshire Standard 15 July 2/1  				Work goes on apace to build on what was a very successful 2004 event.  1.  transitive. To found or develop (something abstract, such as a system of thought or belief, an argument, a reputation, etc.) on (a basis); to base or ground (something) upon; = to build on —— 1 at  Phrasal verbs 2. ΘΠ the world > existence and causation > causation > initiating or causing to begin > initiate			[verb (transitive)]		 > found or establish > in or on something to stand on ——eOE fastc1275 found1390 to stand upon ——a1393 build1528 relya1633 found1667 base1776 premise1881 ?1527    tr.  Copy of Lett. wherin Kyng Henry VIII made Answere vnto M. Luther sig. C.iiii  				For what charite bylde you vpon fayth, whan ye teche that faythe alone without good workes suffyseth. 1646    Sir T. Browne Pseudodoxia Epidemica  i. vii. 25  				Our advanced beliefs are not to be built upon dictates. 1691    J. Ray Wisdom of God 28  				The Theory..is built wholly upon a false supposition. 1766    T. Leland Let. 9 Jan. in  Earl Fitzwilliam  & R. Bourke Corr. Edmund Burke 		(1844)	 I. 95  				You will not, I am certain, build your reputation there, upon a single, studied, manufactured piece of eloquence. 1828    Missionary Reg. July 330/1  				A part of this pride of family is built upon its having remained, in all its branches, attached to its Religion. 1989    S. Eldred-Grigg Siren Celia ii. 41  				It appears a trifling matter to build happiness upon. 2003    Classical Rev. 53 12  				Although she builds an argument upon this claim that Orestes hesitates, she does not in fact establish that he does hesitate.  2.  intransitive. In earlier use often: to rely on, have confidence in (a person or thing). Later usually: to use (something) as a basis for a belief, argument, etc., or for further development. Cf. to build on —— 2 at  Phrasal verbs 2. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > belief > belief, trust, confidence > trust			[verb (intransitive)]		 hopec888 believeOE trowc1000 levec1175 strusta1250 trista1250 trestc1275 traista1300 affyc1330 assurec1374 restc1384 sover1488 confidea1525 faith1555 relyc1571 build1573 1573    G. Harvey Let.-bk. 		(1884)	 27  				I..tould him I wuld bilde uppon him. 1577    W. Fulke Overthrow & Confut. Doctr. Purgatory  ii. vi. 262 in  Two Treat. against Papistes  				I haue often saide we deferre nothing to his authoritie, who was both in a corrupt time, and he himselfe a corrupter of religion by building vpon fables and authorities of men. 1630    P. Massinger Renegado  iv. iii. sig. K2  				Heauen..will not suffer you to want a man, To doe that sacred office, build vpon it. 1643    J. Swan Speculum Mundi 		(ed. 2)	 ii. §3. 33  				I find therefore little in Josephus concerning this to build upon. 1740    S. Richardson Pamela I. xxxi. 144  				I am deny'd..to go to Church, as I had built upon I might. 1799    Med. & Physical Jrnl. 2 222  				Whether or not that evidence is admissible to build upon. 1876    E. Mellor Priesthood vii. 323  				The next passage upon which the Romanists and Ritualists build. 1993    Freetime 9 June 5/4  				[The band] Poison are ready to build upon one of the most coveted fan bases in all of rock 'n' roll. 2015    N.Y. Rev. Bks. 5 Nov. 62/3  				They called the strategy Primary Health Care, and it was intended to build upon the networks of health clinics and hospitals established in former French, British, and Portuguese colonies. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2022). < | 
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