upbuild
English
Verb
upbuild (third-person singular simple present upbuilds, present participle upbuilding, simple past and past participle upbuilt or upbuilded)
- (transitive) To build up (literally).
- 1976, William Morris Davis, The coral reef problem:
- These three islands therefore exemplify, after a fashion, the Rein-Murray theory of oceanic banks, upbuilt by pelagic deposits, as atoll foundations.
- (transitive) To build up; to develop (figuratively).
- 20002, in Kierkegaard's upbuilding discourses: philosophy, theology, literature (George Pattison), page 26 :
- The cultured, on the other hand, are only upbuilt by forgetting about the petty, individual circumstances of life: […]
- 2007 September 7, Dennis Hevesi, “James Jackson, Rights Activist, Dies at 92”, in New York Times:
- “For 300 years as bondsmen and some 93 years as freemen, under slaver’s whip and Jim Crow law,” Mr. Jackson wrote in The Daily Worker in 1958, “Negro Americans have yielded up their labor and expended their lives for the upbuilding of this country in yet unfathomed measure.”
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