manifest
manifest 英 [ˈmænɪfest] 美 [ˈmænəˌfɛst]
vt. 显示,显现 adj. 显然的,明显的
进行时:manifesting 过去式:manifested 过去分词:manifested 第三人称单数:manifests 名词复数:manifests
- Choose the verb manifest when someone shows something for everyone to notice. You might manifest your dislike of school food by stirring it around into a big pile of slop on your tray.
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- vt. 显示,显现
- adj. 显然的,明显的
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1. The symptoms of the disease manifested themselves ten days later.
十天后,这种病的症状显现出来。
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2. His nervousness was manifest to all those present.
所有在场的人都看出了他很紧张。
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3. The anger he felt is manifest in his paintings.
他的愤怒明显地表现在他的绘画之中。
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4. manifestly unfair
明显不公平
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5. The party has manifestly failed to achieve its goal.
这一政党显然没有达到自己的目标。
- manifest (adj.) late 14c., "clearly revealed," from Old French manifest "evident, palpable," (12c.), or directly from Latin manifestus "plainly apprehensible, clear, apparent, evident;" of offenses, "proved by direct evidence;" of offenders, "caught in the act," probably from manus "hand" (from PIE root *man- (2) "hand") + -festus, which apparently is identical to the second element of infest. De Vaan writes, "If manifestus may be interpreted as 'caught by hand', the meanings seem to point to 'grabbing' or 'attacking' for -festus." But he finds none of the proposed ulterior connections compelling, and concludes that, regarding infestus and manifestus, "maybe the two must be separated."
- manifest (n.) "ship's cargo," 1706; see manifest (adj.). Earlier, "a public declaration" (c. 1600; compare manifesto), from French manifeste, verbal noun from manifester. Earlier still in English as "a manifestation" (1560s).
- manifest (v.) late 14c., "to spread" (one's fame), "to show plainly," from manifest (adj.) or else from Latin manifestare "to discover, disclose, betray" (see manifest (adj.)). Meaning "to display by actions" is from 1560s; reflexive sense, of diseases, etc., "to reveal as in operation" is from 1808. Related: Manifested; manifesting.
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