emanate 的 2 个定义
em·a·nat·ed, em·a·nat·ing.
- to flow out, issue, or proceed, as from a source or origin; come forth; originate.
em·a·nat·ed, em·a·nat·ing.
- to send forth; emit.
emanate 近义词
come forth; give off
更多emanate例句
- On Twitter, the nearly verbatim language emanated from about two dozen accounts through the summer.
- 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.
- They show the expanding limits of a ray of light—and everything else—as it emanates from an initial event, such as an explosion.
- Earth’s field, for instance, emanates from its inner “dynamo,” the current of liquid iron churning in its core.
- These force fields — the same entities that emanate from fridge magnets — surround Earth, the sun and all galaxies.
- The concrete building from which the sounds emanate shakes from the impact, rattling the colorful houses on the dirt roads nearby.
- Your bodies will emanate scent, and you will go to paradise.
- Cold white wine would somehow emanate from its own spring just outside the door.
- India, for its part, counter-charges that many attacks within its borders emanate from Pakistan.
- The worthy Germans, who think everything excellent that does not emanate from themselves, copy this custom most conscientiously.
- It may be said that an earnest Barrister should be clean shaven, but the remark would only emanate from those who are bachelors.
- It would, indeed, be disrespectful in the listener not to pay intelligent heed to the discourses which emanate from the pulpit.
- No such crude claims as these emanate from the skilled advertising agents employed by the Sanatogen people.
- But it was not from the members of the Chamber that the movement was to emanate.