rize
(
third-person singular simple present
rizes
,
present participle
rizing
,
simple past
roze
,
past participle
rizen
)
- Obsolete
spelling of
rise
.
1590
,
Edmund Spenser
, chapter XIX, in
Spenser's The Faerie Queene, Book I
[1]
, published
1921
:
Thus long the dore with rage and threats he bet, Yet of those fearfull women none durst
rize
, The Lyon frayed them, him in to let: 165 He would no longer stay him to advize,[*] But open breakes the dore in furious wize, And entring is; when that disdainfull beast Encountring fierce, him suddaine doth surprize, And seizing cruell clawes on trembling brest, 170 Under his Lordly foot him proudly hath supprest.
- Eye dialect
spelling of
rise
.
1905
, Max Pemberton,
The Iron Pirate
[2]
:
Go on, lay me right here as I lay now; but I'll
rize
agen you, and the day'll come when you'd give every dollar ye're worth to dig me up, and give me life agen."
rize
(
Cyrillic spelling
ризе
)
- inflection of
riza
:
- genitive
singular
- nominative
/
accusative
/
vocative
plural
rize
class
5
(
plural
marize
class
6
)
- scorpion
From
Middle English
risen
, from
Old English
r?san
, from
Proto-West Germanic
*r?san
.
rize
(
third-person singular
riseth
)
- to
rise
1867
, “A YOLA ZONG”, in
SONGS, ETC. IN THE DIALECT OF FORTH AND BARGY
, number
12
, page
88
:
Th' ball want a cowlee, the gazb maate all
rize
;
- The ball o'er shot the goal, the dust
rose
all about;
- Jacob Poole (d. 1827) (before 1828) William Barnes, editor,
A Glossary, With some Pieces of Verse, of the old Dialect of the English Colony in the Baronies of Forth and Bargy, County of Wexford, Ireland
, London: J. Russell Smith, published
1867
,
page
88