Noory
What’s the difference between raise and rise ?
Feb 14, 2021 10:08 PM
Answers · 15
2
Hi Noory! You raise a thoughtful question to ponder. It's nice to see these folks rise to meet the challenge.
February 15, 2021
1
raise is when someone/something raises something else I raise my glass rise is when someone/something raises itself The sun rises. I rise in the morning.
February 14, 2021
1
If I remember my grammar, the terms are transitive vs. intransitive. Raise is a transitive verb (requires an object, in other words, something for the verb to be acting upon). You never just raise (except in betting, but that's specialized jargon), you always raise something. Example "The restaurant raised its prices." Rise is an intransitive verb (does not require, and actually can't have an object to be acting upon). You cannot rise something. Example: "The sun rises every day." Many verbs can be used either way, example. For example, "Don't rush" and "Don't rush me." are both correct.
February 15, 2021
1
We struggle with that, too! Raise is something you consciously (intentionally) do (I.e, raise your hand, raise a glass), while rise is the simple action of going up (I.e., the sun always rises, cook your pasta until it rises). Hope that helps!
February 14, 2021
rise is not verb
February 14, 2021
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