单词 | manifest |
释义 | manifestn. 1. A manifestation, an indication. Now rare. ΘΚΠ society > communication > manifestation > [noun] > a manifestation showingOE spectacle1483 ostentationa1513 demonstration1517 objection1554 manifest1561 reflection1590 object1609 manifestation1646 avatar1850 society > communication > indication > [noun] > an indication or sign tokeningc888 fingereOE senyeOE markOE showing?c1225 blossomc1230 signa1325 signifyingc1384 evidencea1393 notea1398 forbysena1400 kenninga1400 knowinga1400 showerc1400 unningc1400 signala1413 signification?a1425 demonstrancec1425 cenyc1440 likelinessc1450 ensign1474 signifure?a1475 outshowinga1500 significativea1500 witter1513 precedent1518 intimation1531 signifier1532 meith1533 monument1536 indicion?1541 likelihood1541 significator1554 manifest1561 show1561 evidency1570 token-teller1574 betokener1587 calendar1590 instance1590 testificate1590 significant1598 crisis1606 index1607 impression1613 denotementa1616 story1620 remark1624 indicium1625 denotation1633 indice1636 signum1643 indiction1653 trace1656 demonstrator1657 indication1660 notationa1661 significatory1660 indicator1666 betrayer1678 demonstration1684 smell1691 wittering1781 notaa1790 blazonry1850 sign vehicle1909 marker1919 rumble1927 1561 T. Norton tr. J. Calvin Inst. Christian Relig. ii. viii. f. 119 He iudgeth that maner of swearing to be a manifest [L. argumentum] of manifest falling from his allegance. a1641 J. Smyth Berkeley MSS (1883) I. 38 For restoring due honor to the dust of this Lord Robert, I present his posteritye with theis tuelue manifests thereof. 1650 H. Brooke Υγιεινη 230 To give some manifest of a desire of good to the person we are angry withal. 1883 E. C. Stedman in Cent. Mag. 25 873 Such a writer must be judged by..his books;..the parol evidence of no associate can weigh against his written manifest for an instant. 1953 A. Miller Crucible iii. 102 She swears that she never saw familiar spirits, apparitions, nor any manifest of the Devil. 1963 I. Layton in R. Brown & D. Bennett Anthol. Canad. Lit. in Eng. (1982) I. 579 He dropped his head... To see temptation coiled before his feet... A cold-eyed skinflint it was, and not The manifest of that joyful wisdom. 2. A public proclamation or declaration; an open statement, a manifesto. ΘΚΠ society > communication > information > announcing or proclaiming > [noun] > an announcement or proclamation > manifesto manifest1616 manifesto1620 1616 J. Maitland in Misc. Sc. Hist. Soc. (1904) II. 196 The publications or manifests fallouing thame publischit wil easelie prooue this written be me. 1618 Declar. Demeanor Sir W. Raleigh 1 But for Actions, that are built vpon sure and solide grounds (such as his Maiesties are), it belongeth to them, to bee published by open manifests. 1641 King Charles I Speech in J. Rushworth Hist. Coll.: Third Pt. (1692) I. 308 My Nephew, the Prince Elector Palatine..hath desired me..to make a Manifest in my Name. 1667 E. Waterhouse Short Narr. Fire London 126 His Proclamations and Manifests against Prophaneness. 1670 C. Cotton tr. G. Girard Hist. Life Duke of Espernon i. ii. 75 There was printed a Manifest, subscrib'd by the Cardinal of Bourbon, as Head of the League. 1700 J. Dryden tr. Homer 1st Bk. Ilias in Fables 207 But you, authentick Witnesses I bring,..Of this my Manifest: That never more This Hand shall combate on the crooked Shore. 1739 in Colonial Rec. Pennsylvania (1851) IV. 382 After having laid the Queen's Manifest before the Assembly, declaring her Designs against Canada. 1752 T. Carte Gen. Hist. Eng. III. App. 820 Murray and the others..publishing manifests to alarm the nation..were driven..out of the kingdom. 1915 A. Huxley Let. Dec. (1969) 87 Meanwhile all is forgiven and forgotten if you subscribe to the Palatine..vide multicoloured manifest thus conceived, which you had better distribute. 1922 Glasgow Herald 12 Apr. 11 The annexation itself had been proclaimed by a personal manifest of the Emperor King. 3. a. The list of a ship's cargo, signed by the master, for the information and use of Customs officers; a list of freight or passengers carried by a train, aeroplane, etc.; (gen.) an inventory. ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > transportation by water > [noun] > cargo > book or list of cargo manifest1697 hold-book1801 society > travel > transport > [noun] > of loads > a load > list of things or persons conveyed waybill1757 manifest1869 1697 E. Hatton Merchant's Mag. (ed. 2) xiv. 234/1 Manifest, a Manifest is a Transcript of a Master of a Ship's Cargo, shewing what is due to him for Freight from each person to whom the Goods in his Ship belong. c1744 in J. Hanway Hist. Acct. Brit. Trade Caspian Sea (1753) II. xii. 68 The said commander..shall..make oath,..that such..goods..were..put on board..as in the said certificate or manifest is mentioned. 1774 W. R. Let. 4 June in John Norton & Sons (1968) 370 I shipt 8 hhds by Esten, and on your rendering me Sales only of 7, I had recourse to the Manifest at Custom House. 1800 P. Colquhoun Treat. Commerce & Police R. Thames xiv. 399 No Goods shall be imported..unless the Master of the Vessel has on board a Manifest signed by himself, containing the names of all the Ports [etc.]. 1869 ‘M. Twain’ in Buffalo Express 21 Aug. 1/3 The doctor is not done taking inventory. He will make out my manifest this evening. 1872 in I. M. Tarbell Hist. Standard Oil Co. (1904) I. 286 The party..covenants and agrees..to make manifests or way-bills of all petroleum or its products, transported over any portion of the railroads. 1884 Manch. Examiner 21 Mar. 4/6 If the..quantities turned out differ from the manifest by one half package, the merchant is fined, the ship and its cargo confiscated. 1956 W. A. Heflin U.S. Air Force Dict. 315/1 Manifest, a document that lists in detail the passengers or other items carried in one aircraft for a specific destination. 1959 R. Collier City that wouldn't Die ix. 143 Watching Schied initial the bomb manifest and hand it down to the chief armourer. 1971 Sunday Austral. 8 Aug. 11/2 He came to my office with..samples of passenger manifests. 1992 New Mexico Oct. 60/1 A manifest of goods, arms and horses taken by Don Luis into the desert wilderness. b. Chiefly North American. More fully manifest train. A fast freight train. ΘΚΠ society > travel > rail travel > rolling stock > [noun] > train > goods train > types of way freight1867 tank-train1901 red ball1906 manifest1912 liner train1962 unit train1962 freightliner1965 1912 Railroad Man's Mag. 17 493 The con highballed, and the manifest freight Pulled out on the stem behind the mail. 1929 Amer. Speech 4 342 Manifest, a fast merchandise freight train. 1931 G. Irwin Amer. Tramp & Underworld Slang 127 Manifest, a fast freight train, from the ‘manifest’ of the goods carried. 1939 Fortune Nov. 50/2 These freights may be divided into three groups: the drags, the locals, and the schedule or ‘manifest’ trains. 1969 Jane's Freight Containers 1968–9 128/1 Daily containers move in expedited Piggy-back trains and transcontinental manifest trains. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2000; most recently modified version published online March 2022). manifestadj.adv. A. adj. 1. a. Clearly revealed to the eye, mind, or judgement; open to view or comprehension; obvious. ΘΚΠ society > communication > manifestation > manifestness > [adjective] sutelc897 openeOE ebera975 graithc1325 broadc1374 plainc1375 clearc1380 grossc1380 manifest1385 notoire1409 patent1508 sensible?1531 discovered1537 plain as a pikestaff (also packstaff, pad-staff)1542 palpable1545 demonstrative1552 plain as the nose on (in) one's face1560 illustrate1562 appearing1566 notorious1581 obvious1583 unshadowed1593 transparent1597 liquid1610 visible1614 pellucid1644 illustrious1654 apertive1661 conspectable1727 suggestive1806 1385 in 3rd Rep. Royal Comm. Hist. MSS (1872) App. 410 in Parl. Papers (C. 673) XXXIII. 337 The Curt..assignet thareto, tewisday..for to caus his dome..to be giffyn..and that he made manyfest in playne Curt. ?a1425 (c1380) G. Chaucer tr. Boethius De Consol. Philos. iii. pr. x. 158 Than is it manifest and open that by the getynge of dyvinite men ben makid blisful. a1525 (c1448) R. Holland Bk. Howlat l. 255 in W. A. Craigie Asloan MS (1925) II. 102 It neidis nocht to renewe all myn vnhele Sen It was menyt to ȝour mynd & maid manifest. 1535 Bible (Coverdale) 1 Esdras ii. 18 Be it knowne and manifest to our lorde the kynge, that the Iewes..begynne to buylde it [sc. the city] agayne. 1555 in R. Hakluyt Princ. Navigations (1589) ii. 299 The beter, and also manifester testification of the truth. 1581 J. Bell tr. W. Haddon & J. Foxe Against Jerome Osorius f. 458v Three manyfest lyes about one poore platter. 1611 Bible (King James) John ix. 3 That the workes of God should be made manifest in him. View more context for this quotation 1671 J. Milton Samson Agonistes 997 She's gone, a manifest Serpent by her sting. View more context for this quotation 1711 R. Steele Spectator No. 71. ⁋10 The contrary is so manifest, that I cannot think you in earnest. 1712 J. Browne tr. P. Pomet et al. Compl. Hist. Druggs I. 179 A Gum that is..glewy in the Mouth, without manifest Taste. 1837 C. R. Goring & A. Pritchard Micrographia 181 It is a manifest and visible error. 1860 J. Tyndall Glaciers of Alps i. iii. 26 In many places..the mass showed manifest signs of lateral pressure. 1890 G. Gissing Emancipated I. iv. 132 His eyes were now agleam, and the beauty of his countenance fully manifest. 1925 J. M. Murry Keats & Shakespeare iv. 42 Two of the clues to the thought behind this letter are manifest to the eye. 1956 W. S. Churchill Hist. Eng.-speaking Peoples II. iv. ii. 16 The Wars of the Roses had weakened English authority in Wales, but it was in Ireland that their effects were most manifest. 1983 W. Byron tr. A. Le Vot F. Scott Fitzgerald vii. xxi. 342 Miss Kroll was conquered by his charm despite his manifest weaknesses. b. Psychology and Medicine. With reference to dreams: directly reported, literal, uninterpreted; esp. in manifest content. Also: able to be observed or reported; producing observable signs; esp. in manifest anxiety. Opposed to latent. ΚΠ 1910 Amer. Jrnl. Psychol. 21 283 The mechanism by which the manifest content is formed from the underlying dream thoughts, falls into four groups—condensation, displacement, dream-making, and secondary collaboration. 1913 E. Jones Papers Psycho-Anal. 26 Freud..contrasts the ‘manifest content’ which is the dream as directly related, with the ‘latent content’, which is the group of thoughts reached by psycho-analysis of the dream. 1951 Jrnl. Exper. Psychol. 41 90/1 A group of widespread, directly observable overt reactions (e.g. restlessness, tenseness, excessive perspiration, etc.) are identified as ‘manifest anxiety’ and considered as the definition of anxiety neurosis. 1954 Psychoanal. Stud. of Child 9 16 Infantile neurosis refers to the inner structure of infantile development, with or without manifest symptoms, which forms the basis of a later neurosis. 1968 Brit. Jrnl. Psychiatry 114 622/1 Shagrass and Naiman (1956) used the sedation threshold as an objective index of anxiety and were able to put various types of neuroses in rank order according to their content of manifest anxiety. 1992 R. D. Gross Psychology (ed. 2) xxix. 908 Displacement refers to the role of symbols in dreams, whereby something (eg. a king) appears in the manifest dream as a substitute for something or somebody involved in the wish (eg. the dreamer's father). 1998 Clin. Pediatrics 37 1 Therapy focuses both on reducing the causes..and on controlling manifest symptoms [of allergic rhinitis]. ΚΠ 1681 J. Dryden Absalom & Achitophel 7 Now, manifest of Crimes, contriv'd long since, He stood a bold Defiance with his Prince. 1700 J. Dryden Chaucer's Palamon & Arcite ii. 623 Calisto there stood manifest of shame. 1725 E. Fenton in A. Pope et al. tr. Homer Odyssey I. i. 277 Thus manifest of right, I build my claim Sure-founded on a fair Maternal fame. = manifestly adv. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ society > communication > manifestation > manifestness > [adverb] couthlyc900 sutelichec900 openlyOE witterlyc1175 kithlya1300 witnessfullyc1374 evidentlya1382 plainlya1382 graithc1394 eberlya1400 express14.. manifest1431 patently1441 manifestlyc1475 evident?1520 grossly1526 apparently1533 clear1550 apparent1565 clearly1569 notoriously1589 plain1590 perspicuously1592 perspectively1598 transparently1617 liquidlya1631 visibly1631 obviously1638 fairly1655 perspiculously1661 remarkably1666 squarely1860 1431 in C. Innes Liber Sancte Marie de Melros (1837) 523 It was manifest thar prufit be actentik letteris [etc.]. a1450 ( G. Chaucer Treat. Astrolabe ii. §26. 3 The excellence of the spere solide..shewith manyfest the diverse ascenciouns of signes in diverse places. a1513 J. Irland Meroure of Wyssdome f. 138, in Dict. Older Sc. Tongue (at cited word) This heresie is manifest impossible. 1542 Acts Parl. Scotl. (1814) II. 417/1 Qulk..makis þe said p[ro]ces manifest fals and inept. Compounds manifest destiny n. (also with capital initials) originally U.S. (now historical) the doctrine or belief that the expansion of the United States throughout the American continents was both justified and inevitable; this (expected) expansion itself; also in extended use. ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > social attitudes > racial attitudes > [noun] > racism > race theory > belief in white supremacy Anglo-Saxonism1844 manifest destiny1845 Saxonism1884 Nordicism1925 white chauvinism1928 white racism1943 1845 J. O'Sullivan in U.S. Mag. & Democratic Rev. July–Aug. 5 Our manifest destiny to overspread the continent allotted by Providence for the free development of our yearly multiplying millions. 1856 Porter's Spirit of Times 13 Dec. 235/2 He was a ‘manifest destiny’ man. 1858 Economist 6 Feb. 139/2 What reasons can be shown for the manifest destiny to whip Africans which do not apply with equal force to prove the manifest destiny to subdue half-caste Spaniards into conformity with their will? 1867 J. R. Lowell Biglow Papers 2nd Ser. (new ed.) Introd. p. ix The incarnation of ‘Manifest Destiny’, in other words, of national recklessness as to right or wrong. 1927 J. W. Pratt in Amer. Hist. Rev. 32 795 One can hardly read a work on the history of the United States in the two decades before the Civil War without meeting the phrase ‘manifest destiny’, widely used as a convenient statement of the philosophy of territorial expansion in that period. 1937 J. Marquand Thank you, Mr. Moto v. 31 It had always seemed to me a piece of manifest destiny..that the Japanese Empire should control China, and I told Best as much. 1959 Listener 18 June 1048/2 The long and stern struggle by which Canada had maintained its separateness against American ‘Manifest Destiny’. 1980 Times Lit. Suppl. 25 Apr. 476/2 As historians come to appreciate the strength of ‘survivalist’ Catholicism, so Protestantism seems to be less..a pre-ordained and natural consummation, England's manifest destiny. 1991 Classic CD Dec. 5/1 An inexhaustible exploration of fugal procedures and permutations greatly ranging in texture and harmony and bursting to fulfil the manifest destiny of its extraordinary subject. manifest function n. Sociology an intended consequence of social actions, structures, etc., which is recognized by the participants. ΚΠ 1949 R. K. Merton Social Theory i. i. 51 Manifest functions are those objective consequences contributing to the adjustment or adaptation of the system which are intended and recognised by participants in the system; Latent functions, correlatively, being those which are neither intended nor recognised. 1957 M. Banton West Afr. City ix. 168 I shall describe..how the companies fulfil their explicit functions of providing mutual aid and entertainment—what R. K. Merton has termed the manifest functions. 1973 P. F. Lazarsfeld Main Trends in Sociol. iii. 51 A manifest function is one which is intended and recognized by all people concerned. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2000; most recently modified version published online March 2022). manifestv. 1. a. transitive. To make (a quality, fact, etc.) evident to the eye or to the understanding; to show plainly, disclose, reveal. Also reflexive, esp. of supernatural beings (cf. sense 6). ΘΚΠ society > communication > manifestation > [verb (transitive)] uppec897 atewOE sutelec1000 openOE awnc1175 kithec1175 forthteec1200 tawnec1220 let witc1275 forthshowa1300 to pilt out?a1300 showa1300 barea1325 mythc1330 unfoldc1374 to open outc1390 assign1398 mustera1400 reyve?a1400 vouchc1400 manifest?a1425 outshowc1425 ostendc1429 explayc1443 objecta1500 reveala1500 patefy?1509 decipher1529 relieve1533 to set outa1540 utter1542 report1548 unbuckle1548 to set forth1551 demonstrate1553 to hold forth1560 testify1560 explicate1565 forthsetc1565 to give show of1567 denudec1572 exhibit1573 apparent1577 display?1578 carry1580 cipher1583 laya1586 foreshow1590 uncloud?1594 vision1594 explain1597 proclaim1597 unroll1598 discloud1600 remonstrate1601 resent1602 to bring out1608 palesate1613 pronounce1615 to speak out1623 elicit1641 confess1646 bear1657 breathe1667 outplay1702 to throw out1741 evolve1744 announce1781 develop1806 exfoliate1808 evince1829 exposit1882 pack1925 ?a1425 (c1380) G. Chaucer tr. Boethius De Consol. Philos. ii. pr. vii. 49 Thynken ye to manyfesten..your renoun and doon yowr name for to ben born forth? 1483 W. Caxton tr. Caton sig. Eviij The synnes ben ofte hydde for a tyme but afterward..they are knowen and manyfestyd. 1484 W. Caxton tr. Subtyl Historyes & Fables Esope xi. 281 The yonge man manyfested or descouered vnto her alle his courage and herte. a1513 W. Dunbar Tua Mariit Wemen in Poems (1998) I. 43 To manifest my makdome to multitude of pepill. 1582 Bible (Rheims) John ii. 11 He manifested [1611 manifested forth] his glorie. 1602 J. Marston Antonios Reuenge iv. iii. sig. G4 Who riseth vp to manifest her guilt? 1611 Bible (King James) 1 John iv. 9 In this was manifested the loue of God towards vs. View more context for this quotation a1616 W. Shakespeare Merry Wives of Windsor (1623) iv. vi. 15 The mirth whereof, so larded with my matter, That neither (singly) can be manifested Without the shew of both. View more context for this quotation 1622 R. Hawkins Observ. Voiage South Sea l. 121 The Sunnes rising manifested vnto vs our errour. 1654 J. Bramhall Just Vindic. Church of Eng. iii. 31 Whether the Act..were operative or declarative, creating new right, or manifesting, or restoring old right. 1736 Bp. J. Butler Analogy of Relig. i. iii. 45 He manifests himself to Us under the Character of a righteous Governor. 1841–8 F. Myers Catholic Thoughts II. iv. §3. 188 Nature manifests itself to us only through our senses. 1875 H. E. Manning Internal Mission of Holy Ghost viii. 210 He created our souls to manifest the light of His image. 1907 ‘M’ tr. Gospel of Râmakrishna iii. 88 I see that God is walking in every human form and manifesting Himself alike through the sage and the sinner. 1932 R. Niebuhr Moral Man & Immoral Society iii. 58 I see that God is walking in every human form and manifesting himself alike in the sage and in the sinner. 1983 A. Mason Illusionist i. 10 His words were followed by a strange hush, as if the ancient intransigence of that religion they spoke of had come down for a moment from its mountain fastnesses and manifested its presence in the elegant room. b. transitive. Of a thing: to be evidence of, prove, attest. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > testing > attestation, witness, evidence > attest, bear witness [verb (transitive)] > be or give evidence of to show forth?c1225 witnessa1300 sustain?c1425 testify1445 showa1500 manifest?a1513 make1573 argue1585 evidence1610 attesta1616 citea1616 evince1621 to speak to ——1624 a1513 W. Dunbar Flyting in Poems (1998) I. 203 Thy frawart phisnomy Dois manifest thy malice to all men. a1616 W. Shakespeare Coriolanus (1623) ii. ii. 13 For Coriolanus neyther to care whether they loue, or hate him, manifests the true knowledge he ha's in their disposition. View more context for this quotation a1674 Earl of Clarendon Brief View Leviathan (1676) 125 The instance he makes of a Princes subduing an other people..should manifest to him the contrary. 1804 J. Abernethy Surg. Observ. 37 This remark is manifested by the present, as well as by many other cases in surgery. 1972 E. H. Gombrich Story of Art (ed. 12) xxiv. 380 The academie of the eighteenth century were under royal patronage, to manifest the interest which the King took in the arts. 1986 P. B. Clarke Black Paradise vi. 92 It manifests a total rejection of the notion of the black person as simply an economic commodity. c. transitive. With clause as object, or with object and infinitive or complement. ΚΠ 1559 W. Cuningham Cosmogr. Glasse 17 I perceive that a circle, & a sphere are both rounde, & have like Centers, & Diameters..yet they do as greatlye..as this definition of Euclid, do manifest plainly. a1578 R. Lindsay Hist. & Cron. Scotl. (1899) II. 58/25 To manefest ȝourselfis quhat men ȝe ar. a1586 Sir P. Sidney Arcadia (1590) i. v. sig. D5 He manifested himself an vnremoveable suiter to her daughter. 1600 W. Shakespeare Henry IV, Pt. 2 iv. iii. 233 Thy life did manifest thou lou'dst me not. View more context for this quotation 1643 Sir T. Browne Religio Medici (authorized ed.) i. §22 No man will be able to prove it, when, from the process of the Text, I can manifest it may be otherwise. View more context for this quotation 1659 J. Pearson Expos. Apostles Creed v. 461 That it was actually so..the place it self will not manifest. 1667 in J. A. Picton City of Liverpool: Select. Munic. Rec. (1883) I. 269 Neither..bowles or boxe had any inscripcion, manifesting them to be the gift of any p'ticular p'son. c1680 W. Beveridge Serm. (1729) I. 476 It is by this chiefly that we manifest ourselves to be christians. 1688 R. Holme Acad. Armory iii. 326/2 The Triangle will presently manifest whether the place be higher or lower than your Eye. 1711 R. Steele Spectator No. 153. ⁋4 It is thus in the Life of a Man of Sense, a short Life is sufficient to manifest himself a Man of Honour and Virtue. 1789 P. Browne Civil & Nat. Hist. Jamaica (new ed.) ii. ii. 97 I have not yet seen the capsulæ of this plant, and place it here only from the habit, which seems to manifest it of this tribe. 1878 J. Ruskin Notes i. 71 Of these ten [drawings], he made anticipatorily four, to manifest what their quality would be. 1981 V. Kulvinskas et al. Life in 21st Cent. p. i The Now is forever flowing through the electric space recreating the mass vision, the all-in-one, manifesting what tomorrow is. 2. a. transitive. To display (a quality, condition, feeling, etc.) by action or behaviour; to give evidence of possessing, reveal the presence of, evince. ΘΚΠ society > communication > manifestation > [verb (transitive)] > by one's action or behaviour kitheOE haveOE showc1175 discoverc1450 to show outc1450 to show forthc1515 manifesta1525 testify1560 specifya1575 witness1581 mark1791 a1525 J. Irland Of Penance & Confession in W. A. Craigie Asloan MS (1923) I. 57 God schawis and manifestis his mercy and werite in hevin in hell and in erd. 1567 in J. Cranstoun Satirical Poems Reformation (1891) I. 119 He Abrahamis Faith, but feir, profest; He Dauidis mercy manifest. 1664 H. Power Exper. Philos. ii. 103 A large Bladder, full blown, will weigh more then itself emptied, and manifest this inequality upon a ticklish pair of scales. 1719 Boston News-let. 19 Jan. 1/2 If it be the Right and Privilege of the Burgesses..to manifest a disregard to the Interest of the Crown..I must then own my reproofs heretofore ought to be spared. 1782 W. Cowper Friendship 112 They manifest their whole life through The needle's deviations too, Their love is so precarious. 1801 Med. & Physical Jrnl. 5 436 No influence, during that time, was manifested by the medicine. 1814 H. F. Cary tr. Dante Vision III. ix. 18 The eyes Of Beatrice..manifested forth Approval of my wish. 1825 E. Bulwer-Lytton Zicci 8 Glyndon had also manifested a graceful faculty for verse. 1849 G. Grote Hist. Greece V. ii. xl. 117 The Medes..manifested great personal bravery. 1853 Parl. Deb. 3rd Ser. 127 1170 When the noble Lord made that announcement, considerable dissatisfaction was manifested on both sides of the House. 1906 J. Galsworthy Man of Prop. 103 Of all the brothers and sisters James manifested the most emotion. Tears rolled down the parallel furrows of his thin face. 1920 H. J. Laski Polit. Thought in Eng. ii. 33 For Locke was above all anxious to leave supreme power in a community whose single will, as manifested by majority-verdict, could not be challenged by any lesser organ than itself. 1954 O. Sitwell Four Continents ii. 25 The Four Continents, even as a title, manifested too antique a style. 1987 R. Ellmann Oscar Wilde xii. 294 He thought of the self as having multiple possibilities, and of his life as manifesting each of these in turn. b. transitive (reflexive or in passive). To be seen to be, or reveal itself as existing or operative. ΘΚΠ society > communication > manifestation > [verb (reflexive)] awnc1175 reveal1493 demonstrate1553 present1585 manifest1726 showa1768 announce1768 1726 J. Swift Gulliver I. ii. iii. 51 The other two..observed..that I had lived several Years, as it was manifested from my Beard. 1808 Med. & Physical Jrnl. 19 137 No tendency, in general, to dysentery, manifested itself at this time. 1860 J. Tyndall Glaciers of Alps i. xx. 142 A strong polar action was manifested at many points of the surrounding rocks. 1871 B. Stewart Heat (ed. 2) §303 This heat..does not as a rule manifest itself by producing any increase of temperature. 1876 J. S. Bristowe Treat. Theory & Pract. Med. ii. i. 149 The first symptoms are said to have manifested themselves on the seventh or eighth day. 1944 S. Bellow Dangling Man 142 My present ill temper first manifested itself last winter. 1986 B. Geldof Is that It? ix. 128 The aggression of the punk era was being manifested not in posturing or in spitting..but in actual physical violence. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > intelligibility > meaning > explanation, exposition > expound, explain [verb (transitive)] arecchec885 unloukOE overrunOE sutelec1000 trahtnec1000 unfolda1050 belayc1175 openc1175 onopena1200 accountc1300 undo?a1366 remenea1382 interpret1382 unwrap1387 exploitc1390 enlumine1393 declarec1400 expoundc1400 unplait?c1400 enperc1420 planea1425 clearc1440 exponec1440 to lay outc1440 to give (also carry) lightc1449 unwind1482 expose1483 reducea1500 manifest1530 explicate1531 explaina1535 unlock?1536 dilucidate1538 elucidate1538 illustrate1538 rechec1540 explicate1543 illucidate1545 enucleate1548 unsnarl1555 commonstrate1563 to lay forth1577 straighten1577 unbroid1577 untwist1577 decipherc1586 illuminate1586 enlighten1587 resolvec1592 cipher1594 eliquidate1596 to take (a person) with one1599 rivelc1600 ravel1604 unbowel1606 unmist1611 extricate1614 unbolta1616 untanglea1616 enode1623 unperplexa1631 perspicuate1634 explata1637 unravel1637 esclarea1639 clarify1642 unweave1642 detenebrate1646 dismystery1652 undecipher1654 unfork1654 unparadox1654 reflect1655 enodate1656 unmysterya1661 liquidatea1670 recognize1676 to clear upa1691 to throw sidelight on1726 to throw (also cast, shed) light on (also upon)1731 eclaircise1754 irradiate1864 unbraid1880 predigest1905 to get (something) straight1920 disambiguate1960 demystify1963 1530 J. Palsgrave Lesclarcissement 632/2 I manyfest, I make a thyng clere or open... It is nat for all men to manyfest this mater. 1596 H. Knyvett Def. Realme (1906) Ep. Ded. 6 My purpose is..principally to manifest unto yor..Matie..what course I hould in the preparinge ordering & conducting of yor forces. 1629 tr. S. Pelegromius Descr. S'hertogenbosh 5 They..manifested their Cause also vnto the Burgers of the Brabandish head Towns. 1669 T. Gale Court of Gentiles: Pt. I 1. iii. x. 108 An oration, if it does not manifest the mater, loseth its designe. 4. transitive. Chiefly Nautical. To record or enumerate in a manifest. Frequently in passive. ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > transportation by water > transport by water [verb (transitive)] > record in declaration of cargo manifest1541 1541 Act 33 Hen. VIII c. 7 The double value of the saide mettall so declared and manifested. 1824 Brit. Consular Rep. (1940) 43 At all times, they have been short manifested to save duties. 1860 Mercantile Marine Mag. 7 120 Should a Captain manifest more packages than there are on board the ship,..he shall pay on each package so manifested. 1902 Daily Chron. 6 June 5/2 Every passenger is ‘manifested’ at the point of departure and various particulars about him set out. ΘΚΠ society > law > administration of justice > general proceedings > arrest > [verb (transitive)] > commit to custody > remove from hostile judges manifest1818 1818 H. Hallam View Europe Middle Ages I. iv. 443 ‘To manifest any one,’ says the writer so often quoted [sc. Zurita], ‘is to wrest him from the hands of the royal officers, that he may not suffer any illegal violence.’ 1818 H. Hallam View Europe Middle Ages I. iv. 444 [tr. Zurita] In such cases only the Justiciary of Aragon, when recourse is had to him, interposes by manifesting the person arrested. 6. transitive (reflexive or intransitive). Originally Spiritualism. Of a ghost or spirit: to reveal its presence, make an appearance. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > sight and vision > visibility > be visible [verb (intransitive)] > appear or become visible > of spirits or angels appearc1250 'pearc1400 manifest1858 the world > physical sensation > sight and vision > visibility > be or become visible [verb (reflexive)] > make an appearance > of a spirit manifest1858 1858 N. Hawthorne French & Ital. Note-bks. (1871) II. 171 Other séances were held in her bed-chamber, at which good and holy spirits manifested themselves. 1898 Daily News 29 Mar. 6/1 A certain ‘Dr. Phinuit’, who, however, for some time has not manifested at all. 1900 Westm. Gaz. 22 Dec. 2/2 She locks the skeleton up in the cupboard, and immediately the ghost manifests with renewed vigour. 1961 W. H. Salter Zoar ix. 112 The view was prevalent that during a trance a spirit invaded the medium's body of which it took..control... Hence the personalities who claimed to manifest during the trance were called ‘Controls’. 1992 C. P. Estés Women who run with Wolves i. 31 The spirits manifest as personages. 7. intransitive. = demonstrate v. 7. ΘΚΠ society > communication > manifestation > showing to the sight > exposure to public view > public demonstration > demonstrate [verb (intransitive)] demonstrate1867 manifest1898 1898 Daily News 21 Feb. 5/6 In this astonishing country a gentleman of repute chooses his own time for going to prison, and is aided by the courtesy of the authorities in manifesting against the Court which condemned him. 1898 Daily News 26 Sept. 4/4 Public opinion in France manifests entirely in the opposite direction. 1899 Daily News 12 June 7/5 The object of the occupants being to manifest there for Loubet. 1978 Daily Gleaner (Fredericton, New Brunswick) 8 Nov. 40/7 Placard-toting strikers ‘manifesting’ in front of a factory. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2000; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < n.1561adj.adv.1385v.?a1425 |
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