Upending in a sentence as a noun

The chances of upending it seemed slim to none.

The problem is, PMPs are a niche market, and upending the iPod will cost more than any profits there are to be had.

I can't think of a single friend who didn't blink at upending their entire life and moving to a new city just for an incremental career move.

This has the potential for upending the prevailing business model of traditional PC vendors.

A continuation of strong new teachings, including a major improvement to the holy trinity, the device that is upending the entire religious sphere.

It's upending education, journalism, commerce and control over the exchange of information.

All over his blog, all over his comments on HN, he makes himself out to be this amazing business guru, juggling 27 world-changing projects at a time, upending major industries with a stroke of his pen.

You make sweeping claims like\n> Technologies like Updn and valME are about upending the entire revenue model for news, social media, blogs, forums, and search enginesYet this site looks only marginally more alive than, say Digg.

Why should we be concerned about inherently bad business models, like "renting" bits, vanishing?We need to eliminate anti-circumvention laws as a first step, and then start talking about the possibility of completely upending the copyright system and replacing it with something that makes sense now that we have the Internet.

I don't mean to get in the way of your hyperbole, but the person above you seemed to have no objection to "respecting" pg, he was taking issue with this:"pg's response is actually priceless: it is like a soft-spoken witness upending a bullying lawyer who had just viciously attacked him, leaving the attacker reeling for all to see."Which you don't mention at all in your response..."If you're under 40, I'm largely uninterested in your take on the world.

Upending definitions

noun

turning upside down; setting on end

See also: inversion