[f. ARISE v. + -ING1.] The action of the vb. ARISE in various senses; now chiefly Obs. or arch., and supplied by RISING; as a. Rising from a seat, from bed, from the dead; rising of the sun.

1

1340.  Ayenb., 14. Þe tuelfte article is to leue þe general arizinge of bodye.

2

c. 1386.  Chaucer, Frankl. T., 559. And kneu the arisyng of his moone wel.

3

c. 1430.  Life St. Kath. (1884), 113. Wher of dounfallyng foleweth so glorious arysynge.

4

1540.  Four P. P., in Hazl., Dods., I. 350. What causeth this: That women after their arising Be so long in their apparelling?

5

1548.  Udall, etc., Prol. Luke (R.). His arisyng from death to life.

6

1646.  Sir T. Browne, Pseud. Ep., 285. Unto the arising of the Dog-star.

7

  b.  Excited rising, insurrection.

8

1340.  Ayenb., 9. Naȝt dyadlich zenne, ase byeþ manie arizinges of ulesse.

9

1591.  Percivall, Sp. Dict., Levantamiento, arising, rising, rebelling.

10

  c.  Springing up, origination.

11

1340.  Ayenb., 147. Ne non arizinge of wreþe.

12

1603.  Knolles, Hist. Turks (1638), 96. The arising of new troubles.

13