arise

arise from

1. To stand up from a seated or prone position. My teenage son doesn't arise from his bed until one in the afternoon.
2. To move in an upward direction. My heart started beating faster as the helicopter arose from the ground.
3. To emerge from a bleak situation. Thanks to scholarships, I was able to go to a top college and arise from poverty.
4. To result from something. Many issues arose from the passing of that bill.
See also: arise

arise out of (something)

1. To stand up from something; to get up out of something. My teenage son doesn't arise out of his bed until one in the afternoon.
2. To move in an upward direction. And then the excess gas arises out of this contraption here.
3. To emerge from a bleak situation. Thanks to scholarships, I was able to arise out of poverty and go to a top college.
4. To result from something. Many issues arose out of the passing of that bill.
See also: arise, of, out
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

arise from something

 and arise out of something 
1. Lit. to get up from something. What time did you arise from bed? I arose out of my slumbers at dawn.
2. Lit. [for something] to drift upward from something. The smoke arose from the burning oil wells. The smoke arose out of the exhaust pipe.
3. Fig. to be due to something; to be caused by something. This whole problem arose from your stubbornness. The labor problem arose out of mismanagement.
4. Fig. [for someone] to come from poor or unfortunate circumstances. She arose from poverty to attain great wealth. She arose out of squalor through her own hard work.
See also: arise
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs.

arise from

v.
1. To result, issue, or proceed from something: Many mistakes in mathematics arise from a misunderstanding of the basic concepts.
2. To move upward from something; ascend from something: The hot air balloons slowly arose from the ground.
See also: arise
The American Heritage® Dictionary of Phrasal Verbs.
See also:
  • arise from
  • arose
  • get oneself up
  • prone to
  • (please) don't get up
  • don't get up
  • sit at
  • sit at (something)
  • scooch over
  • blotter
References in periodicals archive
During the Board Meeting, managing directors of the Integrated Institute of Rural Development, Shimla made presentation on the pilot project on smart panchayats - ruralizing India empowering villages (RIEV) and Operations Resilience, two initiatives under ARISE FICCI.
For those not from the Pharr area, ARISE offers a weekend retreat with its Border Witness Program, intended to immerse participants in the realities of migrants crossing the border.
And, the med pay coverage under the standard ISO Homeowners policy applies to a person off the insured location if the bodily injury "arises out of" a condition on the insured location.
Second, make ARISE trade effect government, so that state employees are insured.
All afflictions such as grasping at things and clinging to a notion of "mine" and all problematic states such as birth, sickness, death and misery arise from the views of the transitory collection and "self" is the reference point for all such views.
Whatever the extent to which social history is being taught, and whatever the level of education concerned, the fundamental question to arise in curriculum planning terms is precisely how much social history should students ideally study.
Thus we believe that a large fraction of the current backgrounds arises from fast neutron interactions that can be further reduced with additional amounts of hydrogenous materials.
Policyholders also should consider whether their policies make clear that their D&O policies cover liabilities that may arise under foreign law.
The cost of carrying out these measurements is high, and additional costs arise when decisions are made on the basis of these results.
Regardless of how well a mill performs operationally, problems will arise that need solutions for the mill to return to acceptable performance.
virginicum, four sepal primordia arise in a helical pattern.
Sometimes these similarities arise from cases of direct influence, especially of Russian writers on African American writers.
The data show malpractice claims arise from disputed valuations of service-based businesses more often than from manufacturing or retail businesses (see exhibit 1, page 50).
Crowley was arguably the biggest star to arise from late Victorian England's fascination with the occult.
However, if embedded chip problems arise, whether in biomedical devices, computer hardware and software or business systems, does the organization have a contingency plan to address these problems?