Rise is an irregular verb. Its past tense form (rose) must be memorized as it does not follow standard conjugation rules.
Verbs that follow a similar irregular pattern to rise:
| Base | Past Tense | Pattern |
|---|---|---|
| drive | drove | vowel change (i-o) |
| ride | rode | vowel change (i-o) |
| write | wrote | vowel change (i-o) |
| shine | shone | vowel change (i-o) |
Rise is irregular. Its past tense (rose) must be memorized.
Use past time markers: "Yesterday, she rose to the store."
No. Use "did not rise" (not "did not rose").
The verb rise is an irregular verb in English. Unlike regular verbs that simply add -ed, rise changes to rose in the past tense. This irregular form must be memorized as it does not follow the standard conjugation rules.
Irregular verbs like rise/rose trace back to Old English strong verbs, where vowel changes (ablaut) indicated tense shifts. Over centuries, most verbs regularized to the -ed pattern, but the most frequently used verbs retained their irregular forms because they were too common to change. This is why go/went, see/saw, and break/broke remain irregular today.
When using rose in writing, remember that it functions as a past tense verb and typically appears with time markers like yesterday, last week, or ago. For example: "Yesterday, she rose to the store." The past tense form does not change based on the subject — I rose, you rose, he/she rose, we rose, they rose.