| APPRAISE | • appraise v. (Transitive) To determine the value or worth of (something), particularly as a person appointed for this purpose. • appraise v. (Transitive) To consider comprehensively. • appraise v. (Transitive) To judge the performance of someone, especially a worker. |
| BEPRAISE | • bepraise v. (Transitive) To praise greatly or extravagantly. • BEPRAISE v. to lavish praise upon. |
| DRAISENE | • DRAISENE n. (historical) a dandy-horse, a sort of early bicycle, also DRAISINE. |
| HEBRAISE | • Hebraise v. Alternative form of Hebraize. • HEBRAISE v. to make Hebrew, also HEBRAIZE. |
| MISRAISE | • misraise v. (Transitive) To raise or excite unreasonably. • MISRAISE v. to raise wrongly. |
| OUTRAISE | • outraise v. (Transitive) To raise more of something than (someone else); often used specifically in reference to fundraising. • OUTRAISE v. to surpass in raising. |
| PRAISERS | • praisers n. Plural of praiser. • PRAISER n. one who praises. |
| RERAISED | • reraised v. Simple past tense and past participle of reraise. • RERAISE v. to raise again. |
| RERAISES | • reraises n. Plural of reraise. • reraises v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of reraise. • RERAISE v. to raise again. |
| UNPRAISE | • UNPRAISE v. to deprive of praise. |
| UNRAISED | • unraised adj. Not having been raised. • unraised adj. (Poker) Having not been raised pre-flop. • UNRAISED adj. not raised. |
| UPRAISED | • upraised adj. (Nonstandard or archaic) Lifted, raised, held high. • upraised v. Simple past tense and past participle of upraise. • UPRAISE v. to raise up. |
| UPRAISER | • upraiser n. One who upraises something. • UPRAISER n. one who upraises. |
| UPRAISES | • upraises v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of upraise. • UPRAISE v. to raise up. |