manifest

pronunciation

How to pronounce manifest in British English: UK [ˈmænɪfest]word uk audio image

How to pronounce manifest in American English: US [ˈmænɪfest] word us audio image

  • Noun:
    a customs document listing the contents put on a ship or plane
  • Verb:
    provide evidence for; stand as proof of; show by one's behavior, attitude, or external attributes
    record in a ship's manifest
    reveal its presence or make an appearance
  • Adjective:
    clearly apparent or obvious to the mind or senses

Word Origin

manifest
manifest: [14] That which is manifest is etymologically ‘grasped by the hand’ – that is, ‘palpable, obvious’. The word comes via Old French from Latin manifestus. This was a later form of manufestus, a compound formed from manus ‘hand’ and *festus ‘gripped’. Manifesto [17] is a borrowing from Italian; it originally meant ‘evidence, proof’, and only gradually developed to the present-day ‘political statement’.=> manifesto, manual
manifest (adj.)
late 14c., "clearly revealed," from Old French manifest "evident, palpable," (12c.), or directly from Latin manifestus "plainly apprehensible, clear, apparent, evident;" of offenses, "proved by direct evidence;" of offenders, "caught in the act," probably from manus "hand" (see manual) + -festus "struck" (compare second element of infest). Other nations have tried to check ... the fulfillment of our manifest destiny to overspread the Continent allotted by Providence for the free development of our yearly multiplying millions. [John O'Sullivan (1813-1895), "U.S. Magazine & Democratic Review," July 1845] The phrase apparently is O'Sullivan's coinage; the notion is as old as the republic.
manifest (v.)
late 14c., "to spread" (one's fame), "to show plainly," from manifest (adj.) or else from Latin manifestare "to discover, disclose, betray" (see manifest (adj.)). Meaning "to display by actions" is from 1560s; reflexive sense, of diseases, etc., "to reveal as in operation" is from 1808. Related: Manifested; manifesting.
manifest (n.)
"ship's cargo," 1706; see manifest (adj.). Earlier, "a public declaration" (c. 1600; compare manifesto), from French manifeste, verbal noun from manifester. Earlier still in English as "a manifestation" (1560s).

Example

1. You believe in competition so that 's what you manifest .
2. What 's more , that physical pain can manifest in surprising ways .
3. Just like humans they have personalities that manifest themselves under the right circumstances .
4. Over time , repressed emotions can trigger physiological changes that manifest in clinical symptoms such as high blood pressure .
5. All of this over an election with manifest shortcomings .

more: >How to Use "manifest" with Example Sentences