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Part 7: Raise vs rise: Learn English in a minute!

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So
andrisebothrefertosomethinggoingup,butthere'sadifferenceinhowweusethem.
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Part 70%
Raise vs rise: Learn English in a m...

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So raise and rise both refer to something going up, but there's a difference in how we use them.

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Raise always needs a direct object – so if you raise something, you move it up.

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For example: I raise my eyebrows when I'm surprised!

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And it doesn't have to be literal – so: The government plan to raise taxes.

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Don't forget this is a regular verb, so the past and past participle are both raised.

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But with rise, there's no direct object.

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So if something rises, it goes up or increases by itself.

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The sun rises at 6 a.m. at the moment.

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Careful, this is an irregular verb so the past is rose and the past participle is risen.