搜尋結果
rise
- IPA[rʌɪz]
英式
- move from a lower position to a higher one; come or go up;(of the sun, moon, or another celestial body) appear above the horizon
- an upward movement; an instance of rising;an instance of social, commercial, or political advancement
verb: rise, 3rd person present: rises, gerund or present participle: rising, past tense: rose, past participle: risen
noun: rise, plural noun: rises
- 釋義
- 片語
動詞
- 1. move from a lower position to a higher one; come or go up the tiny aircraft rose from the ground
- ▪ (of the sun, moon, or another celestial body) appear above the horizon the sun had just risen 同義詞 反義詞
- ▪ (of a fish) come to the surface of water a fish rose and was hooked and landed
- ▪ reach a higher position in society or one's profession the officer was a man of great courage who had risen from the ranks 同義詞
- ▪ succeed in not being limited or constrained by (a restrictive environment or situation) he struggled to rise above his humble background
- ▪ be superior to I try to rise above prejudice
- 2. get up from lying, sitting, or kneeling she pushed back her chair and rose 同義詞 反義詞
- ▪ get out of bed, especially in the morning I rose and got dressed 同義詞 反義詞
- ▪ British (of a meeting or a session of a court) adjourn the judge's remark heralded the signal for the court to rise 同義詞 反義詞
- ▪ be restored to life three days later he rose from the dead 同義詞 反義詞
- 3. cease to be submissive, obedient, or peaceful the activists urged militant factions to rise up 同義詞 反義詞
- ▪ find the strength or ability to respond adequately to (a challenging situation) many participants in the race had never sailed before, but they rose to the challenge
- ▪ (of a person) react with annoyance or argument to (provocation) he didn't rise to my teasing 同義詞
- 4. (of a river) have its source the Euphrates rises in Turkey 同義詞 反義詞
- ▪ (of a wind) start to blow or to blow more strongly the wind continued to rise
- 5. (of land or a natural feature) incline upwards; become higher the moorlands rise and fall in gentle folds 同義詞 反義詞
- ▪ (of a structure or natural feature) be much taller than the surrounding landscape the cliff rose more than a hundred feet above us 同義詞
- ▪ (of someone's hair) stand on end he felt the hairs rise on the back of his neck
- ▪ (of a building) undergo construction from the foundations rows of two-storey houses are slowly rising
- ▪ (of dough) swell by the action of yeast leave the dough in a warm place to rise 同義詞
- ▪ (of a bump, blister, or weal) appear as a swelling on the skin blisters rose on his burned hand
- ▪ (of a person's stomach) become nauseated Fabio's stomach rose at the foul bedding
- 6. increase in number, size, amount, or degree land prices had risen 同義詞 反義詞
- ▪ (of the sea, a river, or other body of water) increase in level, typically through tidal action or flooding the river level rose so high the work had to be abandoned
- ▪ (of a barometer or other measuring instrument) give a higher reading.
- ▪ (of a sound) become louder or higher in pitch my voice rose an octave or two as I screamed 同義詞 反義詞
- ▪ (of an emotion) develop and become more intense he felt a tide of resentment rising in him
- ▪ (of a person's mood) become more cheerful her spirits rose as they left the ugly city behind 同義詞
- ▪ (of the colour in a person's face) become deeper, especially as a result of embarrassment he was teasing her, and she could feel her colour rising
- 7. approaching (a specified age) she was thirty-nine rising forty
名詞
- 1. an upward movement; an instance of rising the bird has a display flight of steep flapping rises
- ▪ an instance of social, commercial, or political advancement few models have had such a meteoric rise 同義詞
- ▪ an upward slope or hill I gained the crest of a rise and saw the plain stretched out before me 同義詞
- ▪ the vertical height of a step, arch, or incline.
- ▪ another term for riser
- 2. an increase in number, size, amount, or degree local people are worried by the rise in crime 同義詞
- ▪ British an increase in salary or wages non-supervisory staff were given a 5 per cent rise 同義詞
- 3. an increase in sound or pitch the rise and fall of his voice
- 4. a source or origin it was here that the brook had its rise