714 collocations for rise

From the wadi rises a hill on which is Kustul, a village covering the site of an old Roman castle from which, doubtless, its name is derived.

Not till the water, dammed and thrown back by the ice, not until it rises many feet and comes down with a volume and momentum irresistible, will the final conflict come.

Upon the hob a kettle sang murmurously, and on a trivet stood a plate whereon rose a tower of toasted muffins.

The water at these falls dashes down in torrents, a sheer depth of 320 feet, the spray rises mountains high and can be seen many miles away, whilst its sound is like the noise of thunder.

Then the sky swiftly cleared, and with the clearing there rose a great cry of amaze from stem to stern of the Wolverine.

" Solemn and sweet rose the chanting voices growing ever more loud, where paced the black-robed priests.

And thus they came at last to Blaen, a cloistered hamlet beyond which rose the grey walls of the ancient manor itself.

On the northern side of the Plateau rose a formidable mountain range, the chief heights of which, from west to east, were Monte Campolungo, Monte Erio, Monte Mosciagh and Monte Longara.

In the Tell, they filled the valley and rose up the slopes of the hills.

And before his mental sight there rose the dread vision of warthe insatiablestriding like a devouring monster over a whole continent.

If he rises to this occasion the Ideal Man, he stands a fair chance of winning from his wife a deeper love than she has yet given any man.

Out in the gardens rose a continuous sound.

In view of the possible departure of the Ninth, and the consequent prolongation of the European war, gold rose several degrees above freezing point.

It spread far around in hollows and ravines and softly swelling hills, with the rush over them of a cheerful breeze full of mountain scents and sounds; and high above them rose the mountain heights of the celestial world, veiled in those blue breadths of distance which are heaven itself when man's fancy ascends to them from the low world at their feet.

In the hexameter rises the fountain's silvery column; In the pentameter aye falling in melody back.

Slowly amid the dimness above came a glimmer from the great window, a pale beam that grew with dawn until up rose the sun and the window glowed in many-hued splendour.

Before us lay an amber- coloured, sun-scorched plain; beyond were the foot-hills, bristling with chaparral, scrub-oaks, pines and cedars; beyond these again rose the grey peaks of the Santa Lucia range, pricking the eastern horizon.

Day was breaking, and before them in the pale light rose a steep cliff, whose jagged outline clothed here and there with brush and vines loomed up before them, barring their advance.

Then the copper helmet broke the surface, rose a few inches, and stopped, and Brown ran to the gangway.

As the sun rose higher rocks were loosened on shattered portions of the cliffs, and came down in rattling avalanches, echoing wildly from crag to crag.

"The poor rose bush!" said the child.

He looked at the wall, but failed to perceive the hole in it, for the woodbine and the wild rose tree covered it like a curtain.

About the post rose the smoke of a hundred camp-fires, and about these fires gathered the women and the children of the hunters.

At last, in the far distance there rose the spires and roofs of Brussels.

In the centre of our view rose the great mass of San Gabriele; Italian patrols were out on its southern slopes, clearly visible through field-glasses.

714 collocations for  rise