English

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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From up- +‎ gear.

Verb

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upgear (third-person singular simple present upgears, present participle upgearing, simple past and past participle upgeared)

  1. (transitive, intransitive, automotive) To shift to a higher gear
    • 1961, Car & Driver, volume 7, page 91:
      The air-cooled two-cylinder engine is less obtrusive than one might expect, thanks to vacuum control which automatically upgears the car and holds down the speed of the 746-cc engine.
  2. (by extension) To shift to a higher level or standard; upgrade
    • 1981, Popular Science, volume 219, number 5, page 66:
      Cam will help but you'd need to upgear a tire size to capitalize on it.
  3. (figurative) To move to an elevated level of activity, performance, or intensity
    • 1987, Jasawanta Siṅgha Kam̆wala, The Other Zafarnamah:
      The vicious cycle of repression was upgeared and intensified.
    • 2001, Andrew Darlington, I was Elvis Presley's Bastard Love-child:
      She says it clearly, carefully and very deliberately, recalling a time when their gigs are already upgearing to concerts and benefits organised by Bill Graham, for whom Airplane become regulars of the Fillmore []

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