different between upbreak vs unbreak

upbreak

English

Etymology

up- +? break

Verb

upbreak (third-person singular simple present upbreaks, present participle upbreaking, simple past upbroke, past participle upbroken)

  1. (intransitive) To break upwards; to force away or passage to the surface.

Noun

upbreak (plural upbreaks)

  1. A break-up or division.
    • 1870, The British and Foreign Evangelical Review (volume 19, page 134)
      The most ignorant will be wiser than the wisest now is by the time these words can be published, but we think this anticipation is likely to be realised: the probability of upbreak in the "Church" itself increases as the hour of the meeting of the Council approaches.
  2. A breaking upward or bursting forth; an upburst.
    • the upbreak of the fountains of my heart

Anagrams

  • break up, break-up, breakup

upbreak From the web:



unbreak

English

Alternative forms

  • un-break

Etymology

From un- +? break, popularised in songs sung by The Alarm (Unbreak the Promise) and Toni Braxton (Unbreak My Heart).

Verb

unbreak (third-person singular simple present unbreaks, present participle unbreaking, simple past unbroke, past participle unbroken)

  1. (transitive) To do the inverse of breaking: to mend, restore, heal or fix.

Anagrams

  • Burkean, Urbanek, unbrake

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