v. [UP- 4.] trans. To hurl up, throw aloft. Also Uphurled pa. pple.

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1582.  Stanyhurst, Æneis, II. (Arb.), 63. Thee wals God Neptune, with mace threeforcked, vphurleth.

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1845.  Mangan, German Anthology, II. 128. From thousand smoke-enveloped cones, Colossal blocks … Are night by night uphurled in air.

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1860.  Borrow, Sleeping Bard, 40. For all the ills by hell uphurl’d It has a remedy.

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1898.  Meredith, Poems, Hard Weather, II. 111. Her passion for old giantkind, That scaled the mount, uphurled the rock.

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