v. [UP- 4.] trans. To hurl up, throw aloft. Also Uphurled pa. pple.
1582. Stanyhurst, Æneis, II. (Arb.), 63. Thee wals God Neptune, with mace threeforcked, vphurleth.
1845. Mangan, German Anthology, II. 128. From thousand smoke-enveloped cones, Colossal blocks Are night by night uphurled in air.
1860. Borrow, Sleeping Bard, 40. For all the ills by hell uphurld It has a remedy.
1898. Meredith, Poems, Hard Weather, II. 111. Her passion for old giantkind, That scaled the mount, uphurled the rock.