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verb

rise

ryz
verb
1
To move upward or increase.
"Prices continued to rise throughout the year."
"The sun rises in the east."
2
To get up from a lying or sitting position, or to get out of bed.
"She rises early every morning to exercise."
noun
1
An increase, or an upward slope.
"He asked his boss for a pay rise."
"The road climbed a steep rise before leveling out."

How to Use Rise

Learner’s notes

In plain EnglishTo go up, get up, or increase — also, as a noun, an increase or a raise in pay.

Common mistake

Don't confuse "rise" (to go up by itself) with "raise" (to lift something else up) — the sun rises, but you raise your hand.

UK vs US

British English commonly uses "pay rise," while American English uses "raise."

Easily confused with
Common pairings
rise to the occasion rise and shine on the rise give rise to

Word Forms

rose past tense, risen past tense, rised past tense, rise plural, rose plural, Rises plural, rises singular, rise singular, rose singular, risest singular, rosest singular, riseth singular

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Test yourself on “rise” A quick quiz — meaning, synonyms & usage

Fill the Gap

Can you complete this real example?

Prices continued to _____ throughout the year.

Etymology

From Old English rīsan, "to rise," from a Proto-Germanic root meaning "to arise" or "get up."

Related Words

Rhymes for rise

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Definitions: FreeDict original editorial