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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
aloft
adverb
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ VERB
hold
▪ Perched precariously on top of the load was the loader, holding aloft the corn-dolly for all to see.
▪ The birth is recorded in an odd shot of the nurse gleefully holding aloft the bloody placenta.
▪ Where was my mother in her white apron and holding aloft a wooden spoon?
▪ The rattle of the sword he had held aloft echoed across the cobblestones.
▪ V., a plastic bag of some clear solution held aloft by one of the paramedics.
▪ Instead, Mr Fittipaldi held aloft a bottle of orange juice from his farm.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ The national flag was flying aloft.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ But the motive behind her achievement was not self-interest alone, nor the desire to carry aloft the banner of feminism.
▪ He described times when the radar crew received requests for winds aloft at eighty thousand feet, ninety thousand feet.
▪ He looked aloft at the distant ceiling, and at the expanse of sparsely-curtained window space.
▪ Kruger took up a sword-sharp scimitar and held it aloft for blessing.
▪ Sanson drew out the head, holding it aloft by the hair to show the crowd.
▪ The film was of large happy female peasants dancing, with garlands held aloft.
▪ The six-man, one-woman crew plans to spend 17 days aloft, a shuttle record.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Aloft

Aloft \A*loft"\, prep. Above; on top of. [Obs.]

Fresh waters run aloft the sea.
--Holland.

Aloft

Aloft \A*loft"\ (?; 115), adv. [Pref. a- + loft, which properly meant air. See Loft.]

  1. On high; in the air; high above the ground. ``He steers his flight aloft.''
    --Milton.

  2. (Naut.) In the top; at the mast head, or on the higher yards or rigging; overhead; hence (Fig. and Colloq.), in or to heaven.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
aloft

c.1200, from a Scandinavian source such as Old Norse a lopti "up above," literally "up in the air," from a "in, on" + lopt "sky, air, atmosphere; loft, upper room" (cognates: Gothic luftus, Old High German luft, Old English lyft "air;" see loft).

Wiktionary
aloft

adv. 1 in the air; in the sky 2 above, overhead, in a high place; up 3 (context nautical English) in the top, at the masthead, or on the higher yard or rigging.

WordNet
aloft
  1. adv. at or on or to the masthead or upper rigging of a ship; "climbed aloft to unfurl the sail"

  2. upward; "the good news sent her spirits aloft"

  3. at or to great height; high up in or into the air; "eagles were soaring aloft"; "dust is whirled aloft"

  4. in the higher atmosphere above the earth; "weather conditions aloft are fine"

Wikipedia
Aloft (film)

Aloft is a 2014 internationally co-produced drama film written and directed by Claudia Llosa, starring Jennifer Connelly, Cillian Murphy, and Mélanie Laurent. The film premiered in competition at the 64th Berlin International Film Festival.

Usage examples of "aloft".

Juss, enforcing his half frozen limbs to resume the ascent, beheld a sight of woe too terrible for the eye: a young man, helmed and graithed in dark iron, a black-a-moor with goggle-eyes and white teeth agrin, who held by the neck a fair young lady kneeling on her knees and clasping his as in supplication, and he most bloodily brandishing aloft his spear of six foot of length as minded to reave her of her life.

The passage let into a circular sanctorum, its albescent walls worked in intricate arabesques, its high vaulted ceiling held aloft by fluted alabaster columns.

It seemed a hopeless chase for these shells to sail after that dying monster with her cloud of canvas all drawing, alow and aloft.

At last they were fortunate enough to catch the southeast trade, but it was so languid at first that the ship barely moved through the water, though they set every stitch, and studding sails alow and aloft, till really she was acres of canvas.

The child, with face ashy white and eyes glistening, her spirit borne aloft by the fervent strains of the litanies, was gazing at the altar, where in imagination she could see the roses multiplying and falling in cascades.

Then my lord turned to me while the king took no heed, and no man in the ring of knights moved from his place, and he set me in the saddle, and turned about to mount, and there came a lord from the ring of men gloriously bedight, and he bowed lowly before my lord, and held his stirrup for him: but lightly he leapt up into the saddle, and took my reins and led me along with him, so that he and the king and I went on together, and all the baronage and their folk shouted and tossed sword and spear aloft and followed after us.

They did not even bother to heave the Biter to, just handed spokes to bring her to the shake, so cranky was she under bodged-up head sails a jury staysail instead of fore course and her brig sail Shockhead was popular but men died, that was the general attitude: he should have kept his eyes aloft, and not sailed with such a drunken crew.

The wind was a brutal live force aloft, buffeting him and set- ting his clothing rattling, and the higher he went, the harder it was to breathe as the wind made his cheeks flutter.

Violet and primrose girls, and organ boys with military monkeys, and systematic bands very determined in tone if not in tune, filled the atmosphere, and crowned the blazing procession of omnibuses, freighted with business men, Cityward, where a column of reddish brown smoke,--blown aloft by the South-west, marked the scene of conflict to which these persistent warriors repaired.

Some harpooneers will consume almost an entire morning in this business, carrying the line high aloft and then reeving it downwards through a block towards the tub, so as in the act of coiling to free it from all possible wrinkles and twists.

As the nobles drew their blades and lifted them on high, in accordance with the ancient custom of Okar when a jeddak announces his intention to wed, Dejah Thoris sprang to her feet and, raising her hand aloft, cried in a loud voice that they desist.

A short time later I awoke to find myself within a tight circle of a hundred rabbis, all davening with Torahs held aloft behind them or in their arms.

The smell of cooking grease, some foul egestion wafting aloft from the bilges, the fug of damp wool and unwashed bod- ies was fit to make him gag, but he forbore manfully.

I shrieked, I screamed, and the amphitheatre of rocks echoed and re-echoed my cries, and all the time the head of the elasmosaurus raised aloft to the full height of its neck, swayed about unsteadily, and its mouth silently struggled and twisted, as if in an attempt to form words, while its eyes looked at me now with wild fear and now with piteous intreaty.

Gashterndale up on to Krothering Side, Corinius let pitch his camp under Erngate End, at the foot of the scree-strewn slopes that rise steeply to the high western face of the mountain, where the lean embattled crags far aloft stand like a wall against high heaven.