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Synonyms
de·scend (dĭ-sĕnd́)

[Middle English descenden, from Old French descendre, from Latin dēscendere, dē-, de-, + scandere, to climb.]

verb: -scend·ed, -scend·ing, -scends. 

intransitive verb 

  1. To move from a higher to a lower place; come or go down.
  2. To slope, extend, or incline downward: “A rough path descended like a steep stair into the plain” (J.R.R. Tolkien)
    1. To come from an ancestor or ancestry: He was descended from a pioneer family.
    2. To come down from a source; derive: a tradition descending from colonial days.
    3. To pass by inheritance: The house has descended through four generations.
  3. To lower oneself; stoop: “She, the conqueror, had descended to the level of the conquered” (James Bryce)
  4. To proceed or progress downward, as in rank, pitch, or scale: titles listed in descending order of importance; notes that descended to the lower register.
  5. To arrive or attack in a sudden or an overwhelming manner: summer tourists descending on the seashore village.

transitive verb 

    1. To move from a higher to a lower part of; go down.
    2. To get down from: “People descended the minibus that shuttled guests to the nearby . . . beach” (Howard Kaplan)
  1. To extend or proceed downward along: a road that descended the mountain in sharp curves.

derivatives

de·scend́i·ble
adjective