increase r**e ascend mount 区别
ascend ** the most colorless of these terms, for it implies littlemore than progressive upward movement<ascend a mountain><the car rapidlyascended the steep grade)>*it may be specifically used of movement along a river in thedirection of its source<the amazon can be ascended by seagoing ships 2300miles>mount usually implies getting up on something above the level of theground and ** therefore preferred to ascend in some collocations; thus, onemounts or less commonly ascends a platform or a scaffold but one may ascend ormount a throne while one invariably mounts a horse.r**e ** the comprehensive term interchangeable with all theothers, but often at a sacrifice of explicitness or picturesqueness. *r**e **idiomatic, and therefore the preferred word, when used:(1) in reference to persons or sometimes animals that get upfrom a recumbent position (as in bed or after a fall) or from a sitting orkneeling position <r**e every morning at six><the injured horse wasunable to r**e> <the audience rose when the national anthem was sung>(2) in reference to things that give the impression of comingup into view<the sun r**es at 5:30> or to an object that seems to liftitself up <the hills r**e in the d**tance)>(3) in reference to fluid (as water) under the influence ofsome natural force that sends it upward <the river r**es regularly eachspring><the mercury ** r**ing> or to any natural phenomenon indicatedby such r**ing of water or other fluid<the tide r**es early tonight><thetemperature ** r**ing> the word may be used more widely than these instancesindicate, but in these and in closely related extensions and metaphoricapplications r**e ** specifically necessary <for the first two weeks, orthree ... the work rose about him like a tide—mary austin><now he felt h** mother counting the week’smoney, and her wrath r**ing—d. h. lawrence><felt the color r**ing in her face—sedgwick>ar**e (see also spring) ** narrower in its range of applicationthan r**e and in most uses ** felt to be rhetorical or poetic excepting perhapsthe senses of to get up in the morning after a night’s sleep or to r**e fromthe gr**e <ar**e, ar**e; awake the snorting citizens with the bell —shak.> <the temple rends, the rocks burst, the deadar**e—steele>soar even in metaphoric use suggests the straight upward flightof a bird that mounts on r**ing currents without flapping of wings; ittherefore usually connotes continuous, often swift, ascent into high altitudes especiallyintellectually, spiritually, or aesthetically<[the skylark] singing stilldost soar, and soaring ever singest— shelley><up from the eastern sea soars the delightfulday—housman> <young soaring imaginations — john reed><the soaring melody of the rondo in thewald-stein sonata ** beethoven’s … transfiguration of the air of a ribald folksong—lowes> ——webster's new dictionary of synonyms (1984) 20210311