Up"right` (?), n.
(Basketwork) A tool made from a flat strip of
steel with chisel edges at both ends, bent into horseshoe, the opening between the cutting edges being adjustable, used for reducing splits to skeins.
Called in full upright shave.
Up"right` (?), a. (Golf) Designating a club in which
the head is
approximately at a right angle
with the shaft.
Up"right` , n. Something standing upright, as a
piece of timber in a building. See Illust. of Frame.
Up"right` (?), a. [AS. upright,
uppriht. See Up, and Right, a.]
1. In an erect position or posture; perpendicular; vertical, or nearly vertical; pointing upward; as, an upright tree.
With chattering teeth, and bristling hair upright.
Dryden.
All have their ears upright.
Spenser.
2. Morally erect; having rectitude; honest; just; as, a man upright in all his ways.
And
that man [Job] was perfect and upright.
Job
i. 1. 3. Conformable to moral rectitude.
Conscience rewards upright conduct with pleasure.
J. M. Mason. 4. Stretched out face upward; flat on the back. [Obs.] " He lay upright."
Chaucer.
Upright drill (Mach.), a drilling machine having the spindle vertical.
&fist; This word and its
derivatives are usually pronounced in prose with the accent on
the first syllable. But they are frequently pronounced
with the accent on the
second in poetry, and the accent on
either syllable is admissible.