rub up
See also: rub-up
English
Verb
rub up (third-person singular simple present rubs up, present participle rubbing up, simple past and past participle rubbed up)
- (transitive) To polish or scrub; to cover (something with a substance) by rubbing.
- I rubbed up the brass buttons on my jacket to make them shine.
- The pitcher rubs up the new baseball with dirt to get a better grip.
- 1695, William Salmon, The Family Dictionary, London: H. Rhodes:
- Stains that come not by Grease are taken out by boiling Lemon-peel in Small-beer, with a little Copperas, till it be very strong of them: then with a hard Brush rub up the place with it,
- 1786, John O’Keeffe, Patrick in Russia, Dublin, act I, page 11:
- Here’s a new guest for you; so clean up your house, rub up the mohogany table […]
- 1847 October 16, Currer Bell [pseudonym; Charlotte Brontë], chapter VIII, in Jane Eyre. An Autobiography. […], volume III, London: Smith, Elder, and Co., […], →OCLC, page 183:
- […] my next [aim was] to rub it [Moor-House] up with beeswax, oil, and an indefinite number of cloths, till it glitters again;
- 1909, Lucy Maud Montgomery, chapter 30, in Anne of Avonlea, Boston: L.C. Page, page 360:
- […] there’s all the silver to be rubbed up yet . . .
- (transitive) To rub (a body part): to massage, give a massage to.
- 1674, Hannah Woolley, A Supplement to The Queen-like Closet, London: Richard Lownds, page 9:
- […] every Morning when you Comb your head, dip a sponge in this water and rub up your Hair, and it will keep it clean and preserve it,
- 1929, Dashiell Hammett, chapter 9, in Red Harvest, New York: Knopf:
- Bush’s handlers dragged him into his corner [of the boxing ring] and rubbed him up, not working very hard at it.
- (transitive) To create (something) by rubbing.
- to rub up a lather
- The new shoe rubbed up a blister on the back of his foot.
- (transitive, intransitive, informal, dated) To revive one's knowledge of (something); to renew (a skill).
- 1775, Richard Brinsley Sheridan, The Rivals, London: John Wilkie, act III, scene 5, page 54:
- I must rub up my balancing, and chasing, and boring.
- 1920, Katherine Mansfield, “The Little Governess”, in Bliss and Other Stories, Toronto: Macmillan, page 239:
- […] you will have a nice quiet day to rest after the journey and rub up your German.
- 1951, Nicholas Monsarrat, The Cruel Sea, New York: Knopf, Part 5, p. 364:
- ‘ […] you’ll have to rub up on the other sort of navigation now. How long is it since you used a sextant?’
- (transitive, US, slang) To assault (someone).[1]
- Synonym: rough up
- 1952, Chester Himes, chapter 11, in Cast the First Stone,, New York: Signet, page 107:
- There was a lot of yelling and gesticulating, and a few blows were passed. A couple of guards got rubbed up a little.
- (transitive, obsolete) To reduce (something) to a powder or paste using friction (with a mortar and pestle, for example); to mix (with something) using friction.
- to rub up pigments with water or oil
- 1697, William Dampier, A New Voyage Round the World, London: James Knapton, “The Travels of Mr. William Dampier,” Chapter 3, p. 60,
- those Europeans, that use their Chocolate ready rubb’d up
- 1943, Charles Wortham Brook, Carlile and the Surgeons, Glasgow: Strickland Press, page 23:
- [Crude mercury] may be concealed in a pill by rubbing it up with anything of which you can make a paste fit for pills;
- (transitive, obsolete) To excite or awaken (something); to revive or reawaken (something).
- to rub up the memory; to rub up old sores
- 1640, James Ussher, Eighteen Sermons Preached in Oxford, London, published 1660, page 128:
- They desire a dead Minister, that would not rub up their consciences,
- 1681, Thomas Manton, One Hundred and Ninety Sermons on the Hundred and Nineteenth Psalm, London: T.P., Sermon 102, p. 629:
- It’s a vexation to them when they would sleep securely, to have their consciences rubbing up and reviving their fears.
- 1702, Susanna Centlivre, The Beau’s Duel, London: D. Brown and N. Cox, act III, page 30:
- Sir Will. What do you mean Gentlemen?
Emil. Only to rub up you[r] Courage a little.
- 1790, Tate Wilkinson, Memoirs of His Own Life, volume 2, York, page 134:
- […] lest I should be negligent, Mr. Garrick sent for me to rub up my attention, fearing I might like a lazy centinel sleep on my post:
References
- Tom Dalzell (ed.), The Routledge Dictionary of Modern American Slang and Unconventional English, 2008.
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