Recherche parmi différents professeurs en Anglais…
emar
'Food prices rise in January' . Could I replace 'rise' with 'Increase'?
Are they interchangeable sometimes although ' increase' refers more to getting bigger and ' rise' to going up?
Thank you
7 févr. 2022 13:49
Réponses · 9
1
Hi Emar, yes you can use both, they are interchangeable.
Rise is more common in everyday speech, increase is more formulaic / mathematical.
7 février 2022
Yes they are sometimes interchangeable like you say, and interchangeable in the situation you describe, but there are situations where either rise or increase will be correct, using the definitions you give. Increase for anything that gets bigger or grows, expands, increases weight or mass etc. And to rise/raise for going up. A thermometer's mercury will go up in the tube( rise). Although the mercury might scientifically expand/increase. we would more commonly say the temperature has risen. The mercury has risen up inside the tube.
7 février 2022
Hi Emar. You can use either, and both are good. (Except I’d rather they decreased of course!)
7 février 2022
Increase is appropriate to put
7 février 2022
Actually if you follow the dictionary definitions precisely, food prices cannot increase that is grammatically incorrect. But your observations for common daily interchangeable use is correct.
7 février 2022
Afficher plus
Vous n'avez pas encore trouvé vos réponses ?
Écrivez vos questions et profitez de l'aide des locuteurs natifs !
emar
Compétences linguistiques
Anglais, Espagnol
Langue étudiée
Anglais
Articles qui pourraient te plaire

Same Word, Different Meaning: American, British, and South African English
22 j'aime · 17 Commentaires

How to Sound Confident in English (Even When You’re Nervous)
17 j'aime · 12 Commentaires

Marketing Vocabulary and Phrases for Business English Learners
15 j'aime · 6 Commentaires
Plus d'articles
