• Upstay

    Origin

    From - + stay.

    Full definition of upstay

    Verb

    1. (now rare) To sustain, support.
      • 1590, Edmund Spenser, The Faerie Queene, III.xii:those two villeins, which her steps vpstayd,
        When her weake feete could scarcely her sustaine,
        And fading vitall powers gan to fade,
        Her forward still with torture did constraine ....
      • 1820, The River Duddon A Series of Sonnets, XXVIII, Journey Renewed:Close to the vital seat of human clay;
        Glad meetings, tender partings, that upstay
      • 1910, The Aeneid of Virgil as translated into English Verse by E. Fairfax Taylor:In front, a massive gateway threats the sky,
        And posts of solid adamant upstay
        An iron tower, firm-planted to defy
        All force, divine or human. Night and day,
      • 1917, Henry Charles Beeching, The Oxford Book of English Mystical Verse, 246, The Tree of LifeLighten, O sword divine, to clear my way,
        And thou, O happy heart, upstay

    Anagrams

    © Wiktionary