a. To direct or carry from a lower to a higher position; raise: lift ones eyes; lifted the suitcase.
b. To transport by air: The helicopter lifted the entire team to the meet.
2.
a. To revoke by taking back; rescind: lifted the embargo.
b. To bring an end to (a blockade or siege) by removing forces.
3. To cease (artillery fire) in an area.
4.
a. To raise in condition, rank, or esteem.
b. To uplift; elate: Your telephone call really lifted my spirits.
5. To remove (plants) from the ground for transplanting.
6. To project or sound in loud, clear tones: lifted their voices in song.
7. Informal To steal; pilfer: A thief lifted my wallet.
8. Informal To copy from something already published; plagiarize: lifted whole paragraphs from the encyclopedia.
9. To pay off or clear (a debt or mortgage, for example).
10. To perform cosmetic surgery on (the face, for example), especially in order to remove wrinkles or sagging skin.
11.
a. Sports To hit (a golf ball) very high into the air.
b. To pick up (a golf ball) to place it in a better lie.
c. To shoot or flip (a puck) so that it rises sharply off the ice.
v.intr.
1.
a. To rise; ascend.
b. To yield to upward pressure: These windows lift easily.
2.
a. To disappear or disperse by or as if by rising: By afternoon the smog had lifted.
b. To stop temporarily: The rain lifted by morning.
3. To become elevated; soar: Their spirits lifted when help came.
n.
1. The act or process of rising or raising to a higher position.
2. Power or force available for raising: the lift of a pump.
3. An amount or a weight raised or capable of being raised at one time; a load.
4.
a. The extent or height to which something is raised or rises; the amount of elevation.
b. The distance or space through which something is raised or rises.
5. A rise or an elevation in the level of the ground.
6. An elevation of the spirits: The good news gave us a lift.
7. A raised, high, or erect position, as of a part of the body: the lift of his chin.
8. A machine or device designed to pick up, raise, or carry something.
9. One of the layers of leather, rubber, or other material making up the heel of a shoe.
10. Chiefly British A passenger or cargo elevator.
11. A ride in a vehicle given to help someone reach a destination: gave my friend a lift into town.
12. Assistance or help: gave her a lift with her heavy packages.
13. A set of pumps used in a mine.
14. The component of the total aerodynamic force acting on an airfoil or on an entire aircraft or winged missile perpendicular to the relative wind and normally exerted in an upward direction, opposing the pull of gravity.
Phrasal Verb:
lift off
To begin flight: The spacecraft lifted off at noon.
Idiom:
lift fire
To increase the range of artillery fire by elevating the muzzle of a piece.
[Middle English liften, from Old Norse lypta.]
lifta·ble adj.
lifter n.
Synonyms: lift, raise, elevate, hoist, heave, boost These verbs mean to move something from a lower to a higher level or position. Lift sometimes stresses the expenditure of effort: a trunk too heavy to lift. Raise often implies movement to an approximately vertical position: raised my hand so I could ask a question. Elevate is sometimes synonymous with the preceding terms (elevated his sprained ankle), but it more often suggests exalting, ennobling, or raising morally or intellectually: A generous and elevated mind is distinguished by nothing more certainly than an eminent degree of curiosity (Samuel Johnson). Hoist is applied principally to the lifting of heavy objects, often by mechanical means: hoist a sunken ship. To heave is to lift or raise with great effort or force: heaved the pack onto his back. Boost suggests upward movement effected by or as if by pushing from below: boosted the child into the saddle. See Also Synonyms at steal.
lift1
vb
1. to rise or cause to rise upwards from the ground or another support to a higher place to lift a sack
2. to move or cause to move upwards to lift ones eyes
3.(tr) to take hold of in order to carry or remove to lift something down from a shelf
4.(tr) to raise in status, spirituality, estimation, etc. his position lifted him from the common crowd
5.(tr) to revoke or rescind to lift tax restrictions
6. to make or become audible or louder to lift ones voice in song
7.(tr) to take (plants or underground crops) out of the ground for transplanting or harvesting
8.(intr) to disappear by lifting or as if by lifting the fog lifted
9. to transport in a vehicle
10.(tr)Informal to take unlawfully or dishonourably; steal
11.(tr)Informal to make dishonest use of (another persons idea, writing, etc.); plagiarize
12.(tr)Slang to arrest
13.(tr) to perform a face-lift on
14. (Economics, Accounting & Finance / Banking & Finance) (tr)US and Canadian to pay off (a mortgage, etc.)
n
1. the act or an instance of lifting
2. the power or force available or used for lifting
3. (Engineering / Mechanical Engineering)
a.Brit a platform, compartment, or cage raised or lowered in a vertical shaft to transport persons or goods in a building US and Canadian word elevator
[from Scandinavian; related to Old Norse lypta, Old English lyft sky; compare loft]
liftableadj
liftern
lift2
n
Scot the sky
[Old English lyft]
lift(lft)
An upward force acting on an object. Lift can be produced in many ways; for example, by creating a low-pressure area above an object, such an airplane wing or other airfoil that is moving through the air, or by lowering the overall density of an object relative to the air around it, as with a hot air balloon. Compare drag. See also airfoilbuoyancy See Note at aerodynamics.
lift /lft/ v.1 [T] to raise to a higher level: He lifted his little girl up to his shoulders.2 [T] to remove, end: The government lifted some restrictions on imported goods.3 [I] to go up and disappear: The fog lifted in the morning sun.4infrml.fig. [T] to steal: Someone lifted my coat from the rack.5to not lift a finger: not to make any effort at all: He did not lift a finger to help his hurt neighbor. n.1 an act of raising to a higher level: A worker gave the box a lift onto a shelf.2fig. a raising of spirits: The good news gave us all a lift.3infrml. a free ride in a vehicle: My friend gave me a lift to the store in his car.4Brit. an elevator