Dictionary
rear up
verb
To rise up, especially an animal like a horse rising up on its rear legs.
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"rear up" is a correct phrase and is commonly used in written English.
It means to rise up on the hind legs, often in an aggressive or threatening manner. Example: The horse suddenly reared up, almost throwing its rider off.
Exact(56)
"People here will rear up in protest," she said.
Maybe they will rear up later, to bedevil my dreams.
No wonder they rear up and blab to the tabloids.
Cactuses rear up, an alien life form in humid New York.
At the preview a taxidermied Trigger will rear up in the atrium.
He could make dinosaurs rear up, ships set sail and bats quiver in belfries.
They've got those ridiculous, mad mountains that just rear up like towers of limestone.
Expect to see that feistiness rear up again as the Feb. 19 primary nears.
Similar(3)
Ethical issues such as these inevitably will rear up--and potentially bite you--during your career.
Long-distance movements (classified in our ethogram as walk) were generally interspersed between two clearly identifiable behaviour patterns characteristic of the wood mouse's ethogram: scan and rear-up.
Furthermore, the individual Chi-square values for different behaviours revealed that these sequential dependencies were between triplets of behaviours associated with long distance movements (i.e. scanning, walking, scanning-while-immobile, rear-up).
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com