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scale up

B2 neutral separable both
In simple words

To make something much bigger or more powerful than it was before.

Literal meaning: To move upward on a scale — fairly transparent.

Meanings

1 B2 neutral

(Business/Industry) To increase the production, size, or scope of an operation to meet greater demand or ambition.

"After a successful pilot program, the charity scaled up its meal delivery service to cover the whole city."

"We need to scale up renewable energy and scale down fossil fuels."

— António Guterres, UN Secretary-General, COP27 Speech, 2022
Grammar: separable
2 B2 neutral

(Science/Engineering) To increase the size or complexity of an experiment, model, or system while maintaining its essential proportions.

"The researchers need to scale up the reaction from a test tube to an industrial reactor."

Grammar: separable
3 C1 neutral

(IT/Tech) To increase the power, memory, or capabilities of existing hardware or software.

"They scaled up the database server by adding more RAM and faster processors."

Grammar: separable
4 B1 neutral

(General) To enlarge a diagram, image, or plan while keeping proportions the same.

"She scaled up the sketch on her computer until it filled the whole screen."

Grammar: separable
Usage notes

Common in business, manufacturing, tech, and science. Can be transitive ('scale up production') or intransitive ('the company scaled up quickly'). Widely used in media and journalism.

Commonly used with

production operations business manufacturing efforts program

Forms

Base
scale up
I/you/we/they
3rd person
scales up
he/she/it
Past simple
scaled up
yesterday
Past participle
scaled up
have + pp
-ing form
scaling up
continuous

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