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Mustafa
What is the difference between to arise and to occur?
Are both interchangeable? I do remember that I have seen the following sentences somewhere;
"If a circumstance arises..."
"If a circumstance occurs..."
However, I feel there should be a nuance between the two. Would you please help on this
Thanks in advance
2018年9月25日 08:22
回答 · 2
2
There may be someone on here who can give a more grammatically correct answer, but as a native speaker, here's my two cents:
Think of a circumstances as an event that has a beginning, middle and an end. When you say a circumstance arises, there is more focus on the beginning of the event (how it started). When you say a circumstance occurs, then there is less focus on a specific part of the event, but it's talking about the event happening as a whole.
I hope that makes sense. Here's some examples off the top of my head.
If an emergency situation arises, you need to act in a decisive manner to make sure that the situation is resolved.
When an emergency situation occurs, there is a chain of events that happens all the way up until the emergency is resolved.
In most situations the words are definitely interchangeable, but this is just a tiny nuance that I could think of.
2018年9月25日
I would probably use "arises" for something that is unexpected or a good thing or a bad thing, something that is going to require a response/decision/change in plans. I might use occur for something more neutral.
Example: If the opportunity arises, I may move to New York.
If the situation arises, we may need to call in more help.
If that occurs, just close the app and reopen it.
2018年9月25日
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Mustafa
語学スキル
英語, スペイン語, トルコ語
言語学習
英語, スペイン語
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