Definitions

from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.

  • intransitive verb To heave upward on a wave or swell.
  • noun The rising movement of a ship on a wave or swell.

from The Century Dictionary.

  • noun Upward angular displacement of the hull of a vessel measured in a longitudinal vertical plane at right angles with and on either side of a horizontal transverse axis passing through the center of flotation.

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • noun The rising motion of water as a wave passes; a surge

from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.

  • verb rise or heave upward under the influence of a natural force such as a wave

Etymologies

from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition

[Probably alteration (influenced by descend or ascend) of send.]

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Examples

  • Pour years ago it had been soprano; as he grew and matured, it would de - scend to the tenor range.

    Here There Are Monsters 2010

  • The hens could fly high, out of range of the arrows, but would have to de - scend to within range to snatch the flag.

    Here There Are Monsters 2010

  • The volunteers and military personell from my community that are already on the scend never stopped to ask the racial makeup of those who needed help.

    Think Progress » By the Numbers: In Katrina’s Wake, Race and Class Largely Ignored 2005

  • What did you think of the scend in “Sideways” where he gets smashed in the face with the motorcycle helmet?

    I saw four good movies this week 2005

  • She turned to see that he seemed a bit blurry-a green haze was starting to de-scend upon the bridge.

    Demons Of Air And Darkness DeCandido, Keith R. A. 2001

  • With half a moon in the sky they sailed out of the confined waterways and felt the scend of the open sea lift the deck beneath their feet.

    Warlock Smith, Wilbur 2001

  • Big Red had tried sailing out of this soup without success, and the Wing Riders had been forced to de - scend to the makeshift rafts to wait out the front's passing.

    Ilse Witch Brooks, Terry 2000

  • Pour years ago it had been soprano; as he grew and matured, it would de - scend to the tenor range.

    Unicorn Point Anthony, Piers 1989

  • The hens could fly high, out of range of the arrows, but would have to de - scend to within range to snatch the flag.

    Unicorn Point Anthony, Piers 1989

  • Seen in this light natural law appears as a group of principles that tran - scend the law of different epochs and regrouping a set of norms endowed with a certain continuity by opposi - tion to the law of a given epoch, which is transitory and changing; for the law of any epoch is the inter - preter of the preceding one, whereas natural law is the law which outlives the times.

    Dictionary of the History of Ideas PAUL FORIERS 1968

Comments

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  • "Bonden at the tiller gauging the scend of the sea, alternately filling a trifle and then luffing up..."

    --Patrick O'Brian, The Ionian Mission, 27

    February 11, 2008