lifted
Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
lift/lɪft/
▶verb
- 1 raise or be raised to a higher position or level.
■ raise (someone's spirits or confidence).
- 2 pick up and move to a different position.
■ transport by air.
■ (lift off) (of an aircraft, spacecraft, etc.) take off, especially vertically.
■ dig up (root vegetables or plants).
- 3 formally remove or end (a legal restriction, ban, etc.).
- 4 carry off or win (a prize or event).
■ informal steal.
- 1 Brit. a platform or compartment housed in a shaft for raising and lowering people or things.
■ a device for carrying people up or down a mountain.
- 2 an act or instance of lifting.
■ upward force exerted by the air on an aerofoil or other structure, counteracting gravity.
■ the maximum weight that an aircraft can raise.
- 3 a free ride in another person's vehicle.
- 4 a feeling of confidence or cheerfulness.
- 5 a built-up heel or device in a boot or shoe.
– phrases
lift a finger (or hand) [usu. with neg.] make the slightest effort.
lift a finger (or hand) [usu. with neg.] make the slightest effort.
– derivatives
liftable adjective,
lifter noun.
liftable adjective,
lifter noun.
'lifted' also found in these Oxford entries:
backstroke
- blind
- butterfly
- exalté
- kick-turn
- open season
- pace
- poppet
- tumbler
- upsy-daisy
- weight

