upsend

English

Etymology

From Middle English upsenden, equivalent to up- +‎ send. Cognate with Scots upsend (to ascend), Dutch opzenden (to redirect, forward), Low German upsenden (to send up, deliver (mail)), Swedish uppsända (to offer up).

Pronunciation

  • Audio (US):(file)

Verb

upsend (third-person singular simple present upsends, present participle upsending, simple past and past participle upsent)

  1. (transitive, archaic) To send, cast, or throw up; deliver; submit.
    • 1808, John Fitchett, Alfred, a poem:
      And now upsend afar a deaf'ning shout [...]
    • 1873, Aeschylus, The Dramas of Aeschylus:
      Hermes and Earth and Thou, Monarch of Hades, do ye now His spirit to the light upsend; [...]
    • 1981, Doris May Lessing, Briefing for a Descent Into Hell:
      Down and down, but the corky sea upsends me to the light again, and there under my hand is rock, a port in the storm, a little peaking black rock that no main mariner has struck before me, nor map ever charted, just a single black basalt rock, [...]
  2. (intransitive, US, Scotland) To ascend; climb up.
    • 1919, Harry Lyman Koopman, Hesperia: an American national poem:
      But when the sun of the fifth day had risen, The Keepers of the Faith, upon a pyre Built near the council-house, with solemn rites Burnt the White Dog, upsending with the smoke The message of their loyalty and thanks.

Noun

upsend (uncountable)

  1. The ability to send up, or transmit.
    Coordinate term: downsend
    • 1982, American Bankers Association, ABA banking journal:
      The Trans-Vista 2000 offers Mosler options like upsend capability, automatic carrier return and fast, accurate customer identification.
    • 2008, Independent banker, Independent Bankers Association of America:
      For example, with a variety of upsend and downsend customer units, and upsend and downsend teller units, we can mix-and-match standard components to create the custom configuration designed to best meet your unique operational []

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