emanate
11emanate — v. (d; intr.) to emanate from * * * [ eməneɪt] (d; intr.) to emanate from …
12emanate — em|a|nate [ˈeməneıt] v [Date: 1700 1800; : Latin; Origin: emanatus, past participle of emanare to flow out ] [T] formal to produce a smell, light etc, or to show a particular quality ▪ He emanates tranquility. >emanation [ˌeməˈneıʃən] n [U and …
13emanate — em|a|nate [ emə,neıt ] verb FORMAL 1. ) intransitive emanate from to come from a particular place: She could hear raised voices emanating from her parents room. Wonderful smells emanated from the kitchen. 2. ) intransitive or transitive if you… …
14emanate — verb ( nated; nating) Etymology: Latin emanatus, past participle of emanare, from e + manare to flow Date: 1756 intransitive verb to come out from a source < a sweet scent emanating from the blossoms > transitive verb emit < she seems to …
15emanate — Synonyms and related words: accrue from, arise, arise from, attend, bail out, be contingent on, be due to, birth, break cover, break forth, bud from, burst forth, come, come after, come forth, come from, come out, come out of, debouch, depend on …
16emanate — [[t]e̱məneɪt[/t]] emanates, emanating, emanated 1) V ERG If a quality emanates from you, or if you emanate a quality, you give people a strong sense that you have that quality. [FORMAL] [V from n] Intelligence and cunning emanated from him... [V… …
17emanate — verb emanate from sth phrasal verb (transitive not in passive) to flow or come from: Delicious smells emanated from the kitchen. emanation noun (C, U) …
18emanate — [ˈeməˌneɪt] verb emanate from sth …
19emanate in rays — index radiate Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …
20emanate from something — ˈemanate from sth derived to come from sth or somewhere Syn: issue from • The sound of loud music emanated from the building. • The proposal originally emanated from the UN …