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rise <a rise; rises> N

rise N

rise (of the sun, etc.)

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
With the rise of satellite broadcasting and pay television, soccer was being turned into a ruthlessly competitive international sport, in which athleticism was at a premium.
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These definitions give rise to the often illusory distinction between hard-style and soft-style martial arts.
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In the northern half of the state, a series of rivers rise on the western side of the Great Dividing Range.
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The two buildings were designed as twin towers, and rise 426 feet (130 meters), with 42 floors.
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Others are polycentric, meaning one zoospore gives rise to many zoosporangium connected by a rhizomycelium.
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And yet, even the rise of the bankers is not the only or the surest indication that centralization is culminating.
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Additionally, most economists agree that this tax shelter increases individual demand for health insurance, leading some to claim that it is largely responsible for the rise in health care spending.
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They held that employers withholding a pay rise from employees was not action short of dismissal.
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Most housing is traditional, 1960s terraced houses, but there have also been rows of flats with communal stairways, demolished in the 1980s, and several blocks of high-rise flats.
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For he, drawing you out of nonbeing into life, will bring on death, and will make you rise up to him.
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