Betekenis van:
rise up

to rise up
Werkwoord
    • stand up on the hind legs, of quadrupeds

    Synoniemen

    Hyperoniemen

    Hyponiemen

    to rise up
    Werkwoord
    • bovenkomen
    • come to the surface

    Synoniemen

    Hyperoniemen

    Hyponiemen

    to rise up
    Werkwoord
    • rebelleren, revolteren, opstaan
    • take part in a rebellion; renounce a former allegiance

    Synoniemen

    Hyperoniemen

    Hyponiemen

    Werkwoord


    Voorbeeldzinnen

    1. Rise up, take up thy bed, and walk.
    2. If the sun were to rise in the west, I would never give up the plan.
    3. Even if the sun were to rise in the west, I wouldn't give up my plan.
    4. Implementation of the Seventh Framework Programme may give rise to the setting up of joint undertakings within the meaning of Articles 45 to 51 of the Treaty.
    5. Actions on a Community scale, as set out in Part I of the Annex, may be subsidised up to 80 % or give rise to a procurement contract financed from the general budget of the European Union.
    6. Programmes and projects financed from the Fund and for which requests for financing have been presented by international organisations in accordance with Article 13(2)(c) shall give rise to the drawing up of a grant contract.
    7. For frequencies up to 100 kHz and for pulsed magnetic fields, the maximum current density associated with the pulses can be calculated from the rise/fall times and the maximum rate of change of magnetic flux density.
    8. Community-wide measures, as set out in part I of the Annex, may be subsidised up to 80 % or give rise to procurement contracts financed from the general budget of the European Union.
    9. The disposal of a company asset to its shareholders should also give rise to taxation of the inherent gain in the asset if there is a corresponding stepped-up basis in the relevant asset in the hands of shareholders, including if the latter are companies, because there should be no step-up in the basis of company assets without company-level tax recognition.
    10. Therefore, at the time when the Postabank sale and purchase agreement was drawn up in October 2003, not all the relevant criteria for determining the post-accession applicability of contingent guarantees and indemnity undertakings (as opposed to other measures, such as those giving rise to a certain payment obligation in the period after accession), were known to the parties concerned.
    11. Implementation of the Framework Programme may give rise to supplementary programmes involving the participation of certain Member States only, the participation of the Community in programmes undertaken by several Member States, or the setting up of joint undertakings or other arrangements within the meaning of Articles 168, 169 and 171 of the Treaty.
    12. Implementation of the Seventh Framework Programme may give rise to supplementary programmes involving the participation of certain Member States only, the participation of the Community in programmes undertaken by several Member States, or the setting up of joint undertakings or other arrangements within the meaning of Articles 168, 169 and 171 of the Treaty.
    13. Implementation of this specific programme may give rise to supplementary programmes involving the participation of certain Member States only, the participation of the Community in programmes undertaken by several Member States, or the setting up of joint undertakings or other arrangements within the meaning of Articles 168, 169 and 171 of the Treaty.
    14. ‘suspected fraud’ means an irregularity giving rise to the initiation of administrative or judicial proceedings at national level in order to establish the presence of intentional behaviour, in particular fraud, as referred to in Article 1(1)(a) of the Convention drawn up on the basis of Article K.3 of the Treaty on European Union, on the protection of the European Communities' financial interests [18];
    15. While the Commission is of the opinion that the appropriate transitional period ended on 31 December 2005, it does acknowledge that its press release of 16 July 2003 could have given rise among the coordination centres concerned to the legitimate expectation that there would be no request for repayment of the aid from which they benefited up to the date of the Court judgment as to substance.