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单词 evince
释义

Definition of evince in English:

evince

verb ɪˈvɪnsəˈvɪns
[with object]formal
  • Reveal the presence of (a quality or feeling); indicate.

    the news stories evinced the usual mixture of sympathy and satisfaction
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Physical examination showed an alert newborn, evincing mucoid nasal discharge, and teary eyes.
    • Speaking of his craft, he evinces a paternal affection for his beer.
    • Deirdre pulled back, shocked by the force of the emotion her mistress was evincing, and was relieved to see the healer approaching.
    • It also looks silly and evinces contempt from car-drivers, proper motorcyclists and even pedestrians, but I don't care.
    • If the dramatic developments for the last two months are any indication, it seems the State Government has not evinced any interest to solve the problem.
    • Hardly moved in, he evinced not the slightest discomfort with rugless floors, shadeless bulbs, and an unseasonable chill.
    • The nostalgia evinced in such iconographic readings is also, Shaw argues, built into the very form of the image.
    • This book evinces a buoyant confidence and a relaxed visionary quality.
    • What's striking about many of these comments is the level of hostility they evince toward religion in general and Christianity in particular.
    • The change from first person singular to plural evinces his embarrassment.
    • Nearly 18 organisations, including those of the State and Central Governments and big industries in the private sector, had evinced interest in the products.
    • I bring it up every so often just to test the waters, which are getting less chilly, but he still evinces quite a bit of hesitation.
    • Encouragingly, they are now evincing interest in entrepreneurship, and are getting into a productive realm much beyond mere economic self-independence.
    • This presentation evinces just the same kind of reaction.
    • Laboratory mice deficient in the gene were found to consume excessive amounts of alcohol, preferring ethanol to water and evincing highly anxious behavior in a maze test.
    • Many foreigners have been evincing a keen interest in taking up research programmes in Sanskrit.
    • But this judgment evinces too much cynicism about American culture.
    • Consistent with our hypothesis, our study revealed that unpopular children who evinced stronger emotional Stroop responses showed the greatest risk for depressive symptoms.
    • On the other hand, a bad idea remains exactly that, no matter how well it is evinced in a story.
    • It was an indication of the interest evinced by music enthusiasts, who were now much more open to classical music.
    • The author evinces not the slightest irony about the fact that his own list would qualify, given his definition, as an exercise in fundamentalism.
    • They consistently lie to the press when talking about security, as evinced again and again by their actions.
    • What makes the new policy's promulgation politically possible is the lack of interest most Americans evince in foreign affairs, save matters of war and peace.
    • So journalists, broadcasters and politicians, and those who are often in the public eye, such as community and business leaders, wield immense power over but evince little loyalty to our language.
    • Her subjects are details of domestic interiors that show wear, each smudge evincing past occupants and lost times.
    • Here is a person who has evinced keen interest in photography, freelance journalism, photojournalism, trekking, river rafting, and collection of coins and stamps.
    • One thing that Grant's posts do evince is that scientific illiteracy increases the opportunities for apt marketers to take advantage of a public incapable of distinguishing between anecdote and evidence.
    • The anger he had evinced earlier had drained away, but Macario did not forget the earlier wounds his pride had suffered.
    • However, while respondents evinced strong preference for having a say in their choice or party candidates, they were more ambivalent about how much autonomy MPs should have from their party once they arrived in parliament.
    • Placing the viewer directly beneath the forms of the rocks, she evinces an appreciation of the sheer weight and power of nature worthy of the Surrealists.
    • Despite such frustrating responses, Harris evinces remarkably little bitterness.
    • The garage is underlit, with a low-slung ceiling and construction that evinces the massive weight first of the cement slabwork and then of the floors and earth above.
    • This is one quality that Bennett has evinced throughout his work, and he understands well why it's so important.
    Synonyms
    reveal, show, make clear, make plain, make obvious, make manifest, manifest, indicate, display, exhibit, demonstrate, be evidence of, evidence, attest to, testify to, bear witness to
    convey, communicate, proclaim, impart, bespeak
    disclose, divulge, betray, give away, expose, lay bare

Derivatives

  • evincement

  • nounɪˈvɪnsməntəˈvɪnsmənt
    archaic
    • An example of evidence or proof demonstrating a fact.

      it was a true savage evincement of love
  • evincible

  • adjective
    formal

Origin

Late 16th century (in the sense 'prove by argument or evidence'): from Latin evincere 'overcome, defeat' (see evict).

Rhymes

chintz, convince, Linz, mince, Port-au-Prince, prince, quince, rinse, since, Vince, wince
 
 

Definition of evince in US English:

evince

verbəˈvɪnsəˈvins
[with object]formal
  • 1Reveal the presence of (a quality or feeling)

    his letters evince the excitement he felt at undertaking this journey
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Encouragingly, they are now evincing interest in entrepreneurship, and are getting into a productive realm much beyond mere economic self-independence.
    • I bring it up every so often just to test the waters, which are getting less chilly, but he still evinces quite a bit of hesitation.
    • The garage is underlit, with a low-slung ceiling and construction that evinces the massive weight first of the cement slabwork and then of the floors and earth above.
    • Physical examination showed an alert newborn, evincing mucoid nasal discharge, and teary eyes.
    • The nostalgia evinced in such iconographic readings is also, Shaw argues, built into the very form of the image.
    • Hardly moved in, he evinced not the slightest discomfort with rugless floors, shadeless bulbs, and an unseasonable chill.
    • Consistent with our hypothesis, our study revealed that unpopular children who evinced stronger emotional Stroop responses showed the greatest risk for depressive symptoms.
    • If the dramatic developments for the last two months are any indication, it seems the State Government has not evinced any interest to solve the problem.
    • So journalists, broadcasters and politicians, and those who are often in the public eye, such as community and business leaders, wield immense power over but evince little loyalty to our language.
    • Despite such frustrating responses, Harris evinces remarkably little bitterness.
    • The author evinces not the slightest irony about the fact that his own list would qualify, given his definition, as an exercise in fundamentalism.
    • Speaking of his craft, he evinces a paternal affection for his beer.
    • It also looks silly and evinces contempt from car-drivers, proper motorcyclists and even pedestrians, but I don't care.
    • On the other hand, a bad idea remains exactly that, no matter how well it is evinced in a story.
    • But this judgment evinces too much cynicism about American culture.
    • Her subjects are details of domestic interiors that show wear, each smudge evincing past occupants and lost times.
    • Here is a person who has evinced keen interest in photography, freelance journalism, photojournalism, trekking, river rafting, and collection of coins and stamps.
    • What's striking about many of these comments is the level of hostility they evince toward religion in general and Christianity in particular.
    • Placing the viewer directly beneath the forms of the rocks, she evinces an appreciation of the sheer weight and power of nature worthy of the Surrealists.
    • However, while respondents evinced strong preference for having a say in their choice or party candidates, they were more ambivalent about how much autonomy MPs should have from their party once they arrived in parliament.
    • This presentation evinces just the same kind of reaction.
    • The anger he had evinced earlier had drained away, but Macario did not forget the earlier wounds his pride had suffered.
    • Laboratory mice deficient in the gene were found to consume excessive amounts of alcohol, preferring ethanol to water and evincing highly anxious behavior in a maze test.
    • One thing that Grant's posts do evince is that scientific illiteracy increases the opportunities for apt marketers to take advantage of a public incapable of distinguishing between anecdote and evidence.
    • Nearly 18 organisations, including those of the State and Central Governments and big industries in the private sector, had evinced interest in the products.
    • This is one quality that Bennett has evinced throughout his work, and he understands well why it's so important.
    • They consistently lie to the press when talking about security, as evinced again and again by their actions.
    • Many foreigners have been evincing a keen interest in taking up research programmes in Sanskrit.
    • Deirdre pulled back, shocked by the force of the emotion her mistress was evincing, and was relieved to see the healer approaching.
    • The change from first person singular to plural evinces his embarrassment.
    • It was an indication of the interest evinced by music enthusiasts, who were now much more open to classical music.
    • This book evinces a buoyant confidence and a relaxed visionary quality.
    • What makes the new policy's promulgation politically possible is the lack of interest most Americans evince in foreign affairs, save matters of war and peace.
    Synonyms
    reveal, show, make clear, make plain, make obvious, make manifest, manifest, indicate, display, exhibit, demonstrate, be evidence of, evidence, attest to, testify to, bear witness to
    1. 1.1 Be evidence of; indicate.
      man's inhumanity to man as evinced in the use of torture
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The change from first person singular to plural evinces his embarrassment.
      • Placing the viewer directly beneath the forms of the rocks, she evinces an appreciation of the sheer weight and power of nature worthy of the Surrealists.
      • However, while respondents evinced strong preference for having a say in their choice or party candidates, they were more ambivalent about how much autonomy MPs should have from their party once they arrived in parliament.
      • It also looks silly and evinces contempt from car-drivers, proper motorcyclists and even pedestrians, but I don't care.
      • Here is a person who has evinced keen interest in photography, freelance journalism, photojournalism, trekking, river rafting, and collection of coins and stamps.
      • The garage is underlit, with a low-slung ceiling and construction that evinces the massive weight first of the cement slabwork and then of the floors and earth above.
      • Encouragingly, they are now evincing interest in entrepreneurship, and are getting into a productive realm much beyond mere economic self-independence.
      • Many foreigners have been evincing a keen interest in taking up research programmes in Sanskrit.
      • Speaking of his craft, he evinces a paternal affection for his beer.
      • They consistently lie to the press when talking about security, as evinced again and again by their actions.
      • This book evinces a buoyant confidence and a relaxed visionary quality.
      • Nearly 18 organisations, including those of the State and Central Governments and big industries in the private sector, had evinced interest in the products.
      • This is one quality that Bennett has evinced throughout his work, and he understands well why it's so important.
      • So journalists, broadcasters and politicians, and those who are often in the public eye, such as community and business leaders, wield immense power over but evince little loyalty to our language.
      • If the dramatic developments for the last two months are any indication, it seems the State Government has not evinced any interest to solve the problem.
      • It was an indication of the interest evinced by music enthusiasts, who were now much more open to classical music.
      • On the other hand, a bad idea remains exactly that, no matter how well it is evinced in a story.

Origin

Late 16th century (in the sense ‘prove by argument or evidence’): from Latin evincere ‘overcome, defeat’ (see evict).

 
 
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更新时间:2025/1/27 21:32:45