Descend Definition & Meaning | Britannica Dictionary (original) (raw)
Britannica Dictionary definition of DESCEND
formal
1
:
to go down
:
to go or move from a higher to a lower place or level
[no object]
- Wait for the elevator to descend.
- The workers descended into the hole.
- The submarine was descending.
- They descended from [=got down from] the platform.
- A herd of goats descended into the valley.
- The airplane will descend to a lower altitude soon.
[+ object]
- Descending the mountain was even more dangerous than climbing/ascending it.
- The children descended the staircase silently.
- descend a ladder
— opposite ascend
2
[no object]
:
to slope or lead downward
- The path descends to the river.
- The stairs descended into the tunnel.
— opposite ascend
3
[no object]
:
to go or change to a worse state or condition
— + into
- After his wife died, he descended [=_sank_] into a deep depression.
- The classroom descended into chaos after the teacher left.
4
[no object]
:
to appear or happen like something that comes down from the sky
- As night descended, the campers built a fire.
— usually + on or upon
- The invaders descended on the village without warning. [=the invaders attacked without warning]
- In autumn/fall, thousands of students descend on/upon [=_visit_] our town.
- Silence descended upon the crowd. [=the crowd became silent]
descend from
[phrasal verb]
descend from (something or someone)
:
to have (something or someone in the past) as an origin or source
- Recent evidence supports the theory that birds descended from dinosaurs.
- The plants descend from a common ancestor.
- The tradition descends from [=_comes from_] an ancient custom.
- They claim to be descended from a noble British family.
descend to
[phrasal verb]
1
descend to (someone)
formal
:
to become owned by (someone) when the former owner has died
- The estate descended to her from her grandparents. [=she inherited the estate from her grandparents]
2
descend to (something)
:
to lower yourself by doing (something)
- She was desperate for money, but she would not descend to [=(more commonly) _stoop to_] asking her friends for help.
— see also descend to someone's level at 1level
in descending order
◊ If people or things are in descending order, they are arranged in a series that begins with the greatest or largest and ends with the least or smallest.
- The states are listed in descending order of population size.
- The sale items are arranged in descending order according to price.