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Using English Wiktionary XML Dump dated Feb 4th 2009
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descend
  • (verb)
    1. To pass from a higher to a lower place; to move downwards; to come or go down in any way, as by falling, flowing, walking, etc.; to plunge; to fall; to incline downward
      The rain descended, and the floods came. Matthew vii. 25.
      We will here descend to matters of later date. Fuller.
    2. To enter mentally; to retire. [Poetic]
      [He] with holiest meditations fed, Into himself descended. Milton.
    3. To make an attack, or incursion, as if from a vantage ground; to come suddenly and with violence; -- with on or upon.
      And on the suitors let thy wrath descend. Pope.
    4. To come down to a lower, less fortunate, humbler, less virtuous, or worse, state or station; to lower or abase one's self; as, he descended from his high estate.
    5. To pass from the more general or important to the particular or less important matters to be considered.
    6. To come down, as from a source, original, or stock; to be derived; to proceed by generation or by transmission; to fall or pass by inheritance; as, the beggar may descend from a prince; a crown descends to the heir.
    7. To move toward the south, or to the southward.
    8. To fall in pitch; to pass from a higher to a lower tone.
    9. To go down upon or along; to pass from a higher to a lower part of; as, they descended the river in boats; to descend a ladder.
      But never tears his cheek descended. Byron.