Dictionary
to rises
verb
To move, or appear to move, physically upwards relative to the ground. intransitive
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Exact(59)
That has been corrected to rises.
However, these changes could also lead to rises in unemployment, inequality, and job insecurity.
Financial squeezes have led to rises in charity closures, mergers and staff redundancies.
That's a 2.7% margin – vulnerable to rises in component pricing as volumes fall.
The rate of increase subsequently slowed, but this year some importers have agreed to rises of 68% or more.
Past surges in the oil price have led to rises in inflation and interest rates that have triggered recessions.
This compares to rises of 17%and12%2% in Ebacc subjects geography and history respectively over the same period.
Meanwhile, single people and two-earner couples have seen their tax bills fall since 2009, due mainly to rises in the tax-free personal allowance.
And even though many insurance policies provide for automatic increases in coverage, typically tied to rises in the cost of living, such increases are often not enough.
DDT is a highly effective insecticide but its use in the 1950s and 60s was linked to rises in cancer in humans and deaths of wildlife, particularly birds.
In most developed countries women have been increasingly delaying childbearing to later in life, which has led to rises in the mean age at first birth.
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CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com