arise from — index develop, emanate, evolve Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
arise from — flow from something, come into being from something, result from something … English contemporary dictionary
arise from — to originate from; to be due to; to be caused by … Idioms and examples
arise from/out of — occur as a result of. → arise … English new terms dictionary
Arise — A*rise ([.a]*r[imac]z ), v. i. [imp. {Arose} ( r[=o]z ); p. pr. & vb. n. {Arising}; p. p. {Arisen} ( r[i^]z n).]. [AS. [=a]r[=i]san; [=a] (equiv. to Goth. us , ur , G. er , orig. meaning out) + r[=i]san to rise; cf. Goth. urreisan to arise. See… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
arise — ► VERB (past arose; past part. arisen) 1) originate or become apparent. 2) (arise from/out of) occur as a result of. 3) formal or literary get or stand up. ORIGIN Old English, related to RISE(Cf. ↑ … English terms dictionary
arise — 01. Give me a call if any problems [arise]. 02. If any questions [arise] during the lecture, don t hesitate to ask them. 03. He always helps out whenever the need for it [arises]. 04. The charges against him [arose] as a result of his dealings… … Grammatical examples in English
arise — [[t]ərɪ̱zən[/t]] ♦♦♦ arises, arising, arose, arisen 1) VERB If a situation or problem arises, it begins to exist or people start to become aware of it. ...if a problem arises later in the pregnancy... The birds also attack crops when the… … English dictionary
arise — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) v. i. get up, awake; originate, begin. See beginning, ascent, effect. II (Roget s IV) v. 1. [To get up] Syn. rise, get up, stand up, stand, wake up, awake, get out of bed, get out of a chair, get to one… … English dictionary for students
arise — a|rise W2S3 [əˈraız] v past tense arose [əˈrəuz US əˈrouz] past participle arisen [əˈrızən] [: Old English; Origin: arisan] 1.) if a problem or difficult situation arises, it begins to happen ▪ A crisis has arisen in the Foreign Office. ▪ More… … Dictionary of contemporary English