upend
See also: up-end
English
editEtymology
editPronunciation
editVerb
editupend (third-person singular simple present upends, present participle upending, simple past and past participle upended)
- (transitive) To end up; to set on end.
- To tip or turn over.
- When he upended the bottle of water over his sleeping sister, the lid popped off and surprised them both.
- upend the box and empty the contents
- 2017 June 11, Ben Fisher, “England seal Under-20 World Cup glory as Dominic Calvert-Lewin strikes”, in the Guardian[1]:
- Venezuela, who introduced the exciting 17-year-old Samuel Sosa late on, pressed forward and eventually carved out a golden opportunity to level. Jake Clarke-Salter, the Chelsea defender, upended Peñaranda inside the box and after consulting the threesome of video officials inside the Suwon World Cup stadium, the referee, Bjorn Kuipers, pointed to the spot.
- (transitive, figurative) To destroy, invalidate, overthrow, or defeat.
- The scientific evidence upended the popular myth.
- 1997 May 4, Adam Nossiter, “Ground Zero”, in The New York Times[2], →ISSN:
- James Meredith's forced admission was a milestone in upending the old order in America's most segregated state, a kind of race relations ground zero.
- 2014 November 17, Roger Cohen, “The horror! The horror! The trauma of ISIS [print version: International New York Times, 18 November 2014, p. 9]”, in The New York Times[3]:
- What is unbearable, in fact, is the feeling, 13 years after 9/11, that America has been chasing its tail; that, in some whack-a-mole horror show, the quashing of a jihadi enclave here only spurs the sprouting of another there; that the ideology of Al Qaeda is still reverberating through a blocked Arab world whose Sunni-Shia balance (insofar as that went) was upended by the American invasion of Iraq.
- (transitive, figurative) To affect or upset drastically.
- By the middle of March 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic upended normal life for virtually all Americans.
- 2021 June 1, Ellen Rosen, “Want Your Nails Done? Let a Robot Do It.”, in The New York Times[4]:
- Coral, another company trying to upend the salon industry, obtained $4.3 million in venture funding around the same time. But Bradley Leong, the company’s chief executive and co-founder, said that because they could not get the device’s price as low as they had hoped in its current iteration, they were making it semirobotic to decrease the cost.
- 2021 August 2, Sheryl Gay Stolberg, Michael D. Shear, “Americans Suffer Pandemic Whiplash as Leaders Struggle With Changing Virus”, in The New York Times[5]:
- A week of public health reversals from the White House and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has left Americans with pandemic whiplash, sowing confusion about coronavirus vaccines and mask-wearing as the Delta variant upends what people thought they knew about how to stay safe.
Translations
editto end up; to set on end
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to tip or turn over
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to destroy, invalidate
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Anagrams
editCategories:
- English terms prefixed with up-
- English 2-syllable words
- English terms with IPA pronunciation
- English terms with audio pronunciation
- Rhymes:English/ɛnd
- Rhymes:English/ɛnd/2 syllables
- English terms with homophones
- English lemmas
- English verbs
- English transitive verbs
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