verb (used without object),em·a·nat·ed,em·a·nat·ing.
to flow out, issue, or proceed, as from a source or origin; come forth; originate.
verb (used with object),em·a·nat·ed,em·a·nat·ing.
to send forth; emit.
Origin of emanate
First recorded in 1780–90; from Latin ēmānātus “having flowed out” (past participle of ēmānāre ), equivalent to ē- “out of, from” + mān-, stem of mānāre “to flow, trickle” + -ātus adjective suffix; see e-1, -ate1
SYNONYMS FOR emanate
1 arise, spring, flow.
SEE SYNONYMS FOR emanate ON THESAURUS.COM
synonym study for emanate
1. See emerge.
OTHER WORDS FROM emanate
em·a·na·tive,adjectiveem·a·na·tor,nounem·a·na·to·ry[em-uh-nuh-tawr-ee, -tohr-ee], /ˈɛm ə nəˌtɔr i, -ˌtoʊr i/, adjectivenon·em·a·nat·ing,adjective
re·em·a·nate,verb (used without object),re·em·a·nat·ed,re·em·a·nat·ing.un·em·a·na·tive,adjective
On Twitter, the nearly verbatim language emanated from about two dozen accounts through the summer.
Pro-Trump youth group enlists teens in secretive campaign likened to a ‘troll farm,’ prompting rebuke by Facebook and Twitter|Isaac Stanley-Becker|September 15, 2020|Washington Post
If you recall that distinctive tang of fresh pavement, what your nose is picking up is the volatile organic molecules emanating from the petroleum-based material.
City pavement is a big source of air pollution|Ula Chrobak|September 3, 2020|Popular Science
They show the expanding limits of a ray of light—and everything else—as it emanates from an initial event, such as an explosion.
How special relativity can help AI predict the future|Will Heaven|August 28, 2020|MIT Technology Review
These force fields — the same entities that emanate from fridge magnets — surround Earth, the sun and all galaxies.
The Hidden Magnetic Universe Begins to Come Into View|Natalie Wolchover|July 2, 2020|Quanta Magazine
Earth’s field, for instance, emanates from its inner “dynamo,” the current of liquid iron churning in its core.
The Hidden Magnetic Universe Begins to Come Into View|Natalie Wolchover|July 2, 2020|Quanta Magazine
Your bodies will emanate scent, and you will go to paradise.
When India Failed in the Mumbai Terrorist Attacks|Emma Garman|November 2, 2013|DAILY BEAST
He is judge and executor of laws which emanate solely from himself.
Due West|Maturin Murray Ballou
The right of passing capital sentence in particular was considered to emanate either mediately or immediately from him.
Secret Societies of the Middle Ages|Thomas Keightley
To be a restraint upon cruelty and vice, public opinion must emanate from a humane and virtuous community.
My Bondage and My Freedom|Frederick Douglass
Then England pinned her faith and plans to a military colonization that should emanate from a distant throne.
A Little Girl in Old Detroit|Amanda Minnie Douglas
A strange phosphoric light seemed to emanate from it, making it distinctly visible.
Glories of Spain|Charles W. Wood
British Dictionary definitions for emanate
emanate
/ (ˈɛməˌneɪt) /
verb
(intr often foll by from) to issue or proceed from or as from a source