to come forth into view or notice, as from concealment or obscurity: a ghost emerging from the grave; a ship emerging from the fog.
to rise or come forth from or as if from water or other liquid.
to come up or arise, as a question or difficulty.
to come into existence; develop.
to rise, as from an inferior or unfortunate state or condition.
Origin of emerge
1630–40; <Latin ēmergere to arise out of, equivalent to ē-e-1 + mergere to dive, sink
synonym study for emerge
1. Emerge,emanate,issue mean to come forth. Emerge is used of coming forth from a place shut off from view, or from concealment, or the like, into sight and notice: The sun emerges from behind the clouds.Emanate is used of intangible things, as light or ideas, spreading from a source: Rumors often emanate from irresponsible persons.Issue is often used of a number of persons, a mass of matter, or a volume of smoke, sound, or the like, coming forth through any outlet or outlets: The crowd issued from the building.
OTHER WORDS FROM emerge
re·e·merge,verb (used without object),re·e·merged,re·e·merg·ing.un·e·merged,adjective
TikTok has rejected Microsoft’s acquisition bid, and Oracle emerged as the dark horse partner.
The U.S. has nailed Chinese companies this year. Why hasn’t Beijing retaliated?|Veta Chan|September 17, 2020|Fortune
While your typical customer journey might depend on your industry and business, chances are good that you can find ways to enhance it with emerging technologies.
How to drive digital innovation necessary during the pandemic|Nick Chasinov|September 16, 2020|Search Engine Watch
Slack is emerging as the de facto remote headquarters for millions of knowledge workers around the world.
Slack hires former Live Nation exec as new chief people officer|Michal Lev-Ram, writer|September 16, 2020|Fortune
It is true that guidance that originally emerged included recommendations against mask-wearing.
Parsing Trump’s baffling, head-slapping comments on mask-wearing|Philip Bump|September 16, 2020|Washington Post
To slash emissions affordably, countries around the world—particularly emerging economies with fast-growing energy demand, such as India—will need to make fossil-fuel use cleaner in addition to expanding use of renewables.
To confront the climate crisis, the US should launch a National Energy Innovation Mission|Amy Nordrum|September 15, 2020|MIT Technology Review
With Big Eyes a lot of people, myself included, were glad to see you emerge from the rabbit hole that is the CG world.
Tim Burton Talks ‘Big Eyes,’ His Taste For the Macabre, and the ‘Beetlejuice’ Sequel|Marlow Stern|December 17, 2014|DAILY BEAST
A cynical old Chicago lawyer once described this as the theory that “out of the clash of lies, truth will emerge.”
Ferguson’s Grand Jury Bought Darren Wilson’s Story|Paul Campos|November 25, 2014|DAILY BEAST
This fight looks like it will emerge as the major American wildlife campaign of the decade.
What It Takes to Kill a Grizzly Bear|Doug Peacock|November 23, 2014|DAILY BEAST
It took decades for comics to recover and emerge as an adult art form.
The Insane Swedish Plan to Rate Games for Sexism|Nick Gillespie|November 20, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Every night, they emerge from their roosts, taking to the skies on silent wings.
Bats’ Link to Ebola Finally Solved|Carrie Arnold|November 12, 2014|DAILY BEAST
The Dialogue allows these and related distinctions to emerge, even though it does not grapple with their implications.
A Dialogue upon the Gardens|William Gilpin
Buried, no doubt, in some garret hermitage or studio, they emerge thus weekly to greet silently the passing world.
The Real Latin Quarter|F. Berkeley Smith
Before he could emerge from the water, the future dandy author of Pelham had to borrow a suit of corduroys from a rustic.
The Continental Monthly, Vol 2, No 6, December 1862|Various
You emerge from it apparently sober and of the opposite sex.
Foe-Farrell|Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch
It is said that medival medicine first began to emerge from obscurity in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries.
The Story of London|Henry B. Wheatley
British Dictionary definitions for emerge
emerge
/ (ɪˈmɜːdʒ) /
verb (intr often foll by from)
to come up to the surface of or rise from water or other liquid
to come into view, as from concealment or obscurityhe emerged from the cave
(foll by from)to come out (of) or live (through a difficult experience)he emerged from his ordeal with dignity
to become apparentseveral interesting things emerged from the report
Derived forms of emerge
emerging, adjective
Word Origin for emerge
C17: from Latin ēmergere to rise up from, from mergere to dip