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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
manifest
I.verb
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ NOUN
form
▪ It manifests the highest form of intelligence because it is a form that give shape to intelligence.
▪ They became the spearhead of political disaffection which was usually manifested in, the form of strikes.
ways
▪ Don't be surprised if your grief manifests itself in unexpected ways.
▪ Stress signals can manifest themselves in different ways according to the individual's predisposition and personality.
▪ This may manifest itself in various ways.
▪ This has manifested itself in three ways.
▪ Its inadequacy is manifested in at least two ways.
▪ This variation in form manifests itself in different ways, depending on the language.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ Mountain sickness is usually manifested as headache and tiredness.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Classical tardive dyskinesia is manifested by the insidious onset of oral-lingual-buccal dyskinesia.
▪ For the character to know and demonstrate their doom, their body must physically manifest the flaw through an impairment.
▪ How you manifest your aspects is your choice entirely.
▪ Originally Delphi manifested the Goddess of Prophecy in a vaporous cave where fumes induced visionary trances.
▪ Subacute combined degeneration of the spinal cord due to vitamin B12 deficiency is a treatable condition manifesting sensory ataxia.
▪ They manifested themselves particularly in language.
▪ They also disagree on how functions are manifested in literary language.
▪ This problem manifests itself when a student forgets to bring home her books or remembers the books but forgets the homework assignments.
II.adjective
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ The educational system is a manifest failure.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ As in Prague, Warsaw and East Berlin in those days, people power has been manifest.
▪ In the case of manifest content there is no real problem.
▪ It is then that the full impact of Cobra power is manifest.
▪ On the dang I thought of him as an imposing man in whose face a heightened intelligence and authority was manifest.
▪ That is, it studies the relation between the significances of a text, and the linguistic characteristics in which they are manifest.
▪ That vision was made manifest in the Ford Motor Company.
▪ The doctrine of manifest destiny was distinct from the imperialist dynamic that flourished around the turn of the century.
▪ The mountaintop offers different information-there some grand order seems both manifest and enormous, far larger than the purely human world.
III.noun
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ the flight's passenger manifest
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ And I can't help seeing the manifests - in any case, I've always been interested in them.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Manifest

Manifest \Man"i*fest\, n.; pl. Manifests. [Cf. F. manifeste. See Manifest, a., and cf. Manifesto.]

  1. A public declaration; an open statement; a manifesto. See Manifesto. [Obs.]

  2. A list or invoice of a ship's cargo, containing a description by marks, numbers, etc., of each package of goods, to be exhibited at the customhouse; as, to inspect the ship's manifest.
    --Bouvier.

Manifest

Manifest \Man"i*fest\, a. [F. manifeste, L. manifestus, lit., struck by the hand, hence, palpable; manus hand + fendere (in comp.) to strike. See Manual, and Defend.]

  1. Evident to the senses, esp. to the sight; apparent; distinctly perceived; hence, obvious to the understanding; apparent to the mind; easily apprehensible; plain; not obscure or hidden.

    Neither is there any creature that is not manifest in his sight. -- Heb. iv. 13.

    That which may be known of God is manifest in them.
    --Rom. i. 19.

    Thus manifest to sight the god appeared.
    --Dryden.

  2. Detected; convicted; -- with of. [R.]

    Calistho there stood manifest of shame.
    --Dryden.

    Syn: Open; clear; apparent; evident; visible; conspicuous; plain; obvious.

    Usage: Manifest, Clear, Plain, Obvious, Evident. What is clear can be seen readily; what is obvious lies directly in our way, and necessarily arrests our attention; what is evident is seen so clearly as to remove doubt; what is manifest is very distinctly evident.

    So clear, so shining, and so evident, That it will glimmer through a blind man's eye.
    --Shak.

    Entertained with solitude, Where obvious duty erewhile appeared unsought.
    --Milton.

    I saw, I saw him manifest in view, His voice, his figure, and his gesture knew.
    --Dryden.

Manifest

Manifest \Man"i*fest\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Manifested; p. pr. & vb. n. Manifesting.]

  1. To show plainly; to make to appear distinctly, -- usually to the mind; to put beyond question or doubt; to display; to exhibit.

    There is nothing hid which shall not be manifested.
    --Mark iv. 2

  2. Thy life did manifest thou lovedst me not.
    --Shak.

    2. To exhibit the manifests or prepared invoices of; to declare at the customhouse.

    Syn: To reveal; declare; evince; make known; disclose; discover; display.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
manifest

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).\nOther 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]\nThe phrase apparently is O'Sullivan's coinage; the notion is as old as the republic.

manifest

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

"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).

Wiktionary
manifest
  1. 1 evident to the senses, especially to the sight; apparent; distinctly perceived. 2 obvious to the understanding; apparent to the mind; easily apprehensible; plain; not obscure or hidden. 3 (context rare used with "of" English) detect; convicted. n. 1 (context obsolete English) A public declaration; an open statement; a manifesto or manifestation. 2 A list or invoice of the passengers or goods being carried by a commercial vehicle or ship. 3 (context computing English) A file containing metadata describing other files. v

  2. To show plainly; to make to appear distinctly, usually to the mind; to put beyond question or doubt; to display; to exhibit.

WordNet
manifest

adj. clearly apparent or obvious to the mind or senses; "the effects of the drought are apparent to anyone who sees the parched fields"; "evident hostility"; "manifest disapproval"; "patent advantages"; "made his meaning plain"; "it is plain that he is no reactionary"; "in plain view" [syn: apparent, evident, patent, plain]

manifest

n. a customs document listing the contents put on a ship or plane

manifest
  1. v. provide evidence for; stand as proof of; show by one's behavior, attitude, or external attributes; "His high fever attested to his illness"; "The buildings in Rome manifest a high level of architectural sophistication"; "This decision demonstrates his sense of fairness" [syn: attest, certify, demonstrate, evidence]

  2. record in a ship's manifest; "each passenger must be manifested"

  3. reveal its presence or make an appearance; "the ghost manifests each year on the same day"

Wikipedia
Manifest (convention)

Melbourne Anime Festival, colloquially known as "Manifest", is a defunct three-day fan convention held in Melbourne, Australia. It focused on the art of anime and manga, East Asian culture, and its associated fandoms. Manifest was held at the Parkville campus of the University of Melbourne until 2009, when it moved to the Melbourne Showgrounds. It was held in August each year. Following the 2013 convention, Manifest closed its doors.

Run by the not-for-profit organisation MAFI (Melbourne Anime Festival Inc.) and staffed entirely by volunteers, Manifest is the longest-running anime convention in Australia. The organising committee held regular meetings to plan and organise the event, and was made up of 30-75 people. In addition, more than a hundred individuals volunteer their time on the event weekend to help run the convention.

In 2009, Manifest moved to the Melbourne Showgrounds and, for the first time, ran overnight with a branch-out event called Mani-Midnight. The focus was on providing a more adult event, including:

  • mature-rated anime and live action screenings
  • role playing games, including Dungeons & Dragons
  • card games, including Magic: The Gathering
  • traditional board games

Manifest 2008 ran at The University of Melbourne for three full days, starting on the morning of Friday 26 September, and finishing the evening of Sunday 28th.

In 2007 Manifest added another event to the schedule, the anime ball Amaranth, which took place on Thursday 13 September, the evening prior to Manifest's commencement. The ball, Amaranth, was a huge success. It continued to be a part of Manifest, with the event traditionally occurring the Thursday for several years before being moved to the Friday in 2011 and continued to be a part of the event up until Manifest's dissolution in 2013

Manifest (CLI)

In computer science, an assembly manifest is a text file containing metadata about CLI assemblies. It describes the relationship and dependencies of the components in the assembly, versioning information, scope information and the security permissions required by the assembly.

The manifest information embedded within an assembly can be viewed using IL Disassembler (ILDASM.exe) which is available as part of Microsoft Windows SDK.

Manifest (album)

Manifest is Impaled Nazarene's 10th full-length studio album.

Manifest (Linda Sundblad album)

Manifest is a 2010 Linda Sundblad album.

Manifest

Manifest may refer to:

  • Manifest (transportation), a document listing the cargo, passengers, and crew of a ship, aircraft, or vehicle, for the use of customs and other officials
  • Manifest (convention), a Melbourne anime festival
  • Manifest (album), a 2007 album by Impaled Nazarene
  • Manifest (Linda Sundblad album) (2010)
  • Manifest!, a 2012 album by Friends
  • Manifest, a 2008 album by Chessie
  • "Manifest", a song by Sepultura from Chaos A.D.
  • "Manifest", a song by the Fugees from The Score
  • "Manifest", a song by Gang Starr from No More Mr. Nice Guy
  • Manifest file, a computer file that enumerates files that are contained in a package
Manifest (urban arts festival)

Manifest is an "urban arts festival" put on by Columbia College Chicago to showcase the works of graduate students and seniors from the many departments of the college. Started in 2002, activities at Manifest include gallery shows, musical performances, screenings, readings, and various other activities and the whole event is open to the public. It is also a time when many of the clubs at Columbia promote themselves to returning students. In 2007, Manifest coincided, perhaps just by chance, with the premier of Looptopia in the downtown central business district known as the Loop. Manifest is always held on a Friday and past dates have included May 15, 2006 and May 11, 2007. Manifest 2008 was on May 16. Several large name groups have played at Manifest including Ozomatli in 2005, Lupe Fiasco in 2007, and OK Go in 2008. According to the official Columbia page, 30,000 people attended and participated in Manifest.

Manifest (transportation)

A manifest or customs manifest or "cargo document" is a document listing the cargo, passengers, and crew of a ship, aircraft, or vehicle, for the use of customs and other officials. Where such a list is limited to identifying passengers, it is a passenger manifest or passenger list; conversely, such a list limited to identifying cargo is a cargo manifest or cargo list. The manifest may be used by people having an interest in the transport to ensure that passengers and cargo listed as having been placed on board the transport at the beginning of its passage continue to be on board when it arrives at its destination.

Usage examples of "manifest".

Only their act of observing my state of being will cause my aliveness or deadness to become manifest.

He has taught himself to see her, has named that recessive allele that manifests itself only once every hundred generations.

In the presence of these they now make manifest their apperceiving power.

Thus Pheidias wrought the Zeus upon no model among things of sense but by apprehending what form Zeus must take if he chose to become manifest to sight.

Quality: reason has, so to speak, appropriated a portion of Reality, that portion manifest to it on the surface.

One way that this archetypal association manifests itself in dreams is that there is a tendency for the quality of light in dreams to be metaphoric of the quality of waking consciousness that has already been brought to the main theme of the dream.

To this arrangement the recluse assented, and Emily prepared for the ball with a melancholy recollection of the consequences which grew out of the last she had attended--melancholy at the fate of Digby, and pleasure at the principles manifested by Denbigh, on the occasion.

This astrolatry, originally a kind of fetichism, became nature-worship, and gradually rose to the worship of the intelligence manifested to our contemplation in the movement of the heavenly luminaries.

As we renew our present-moment attentiveness, we can be reassured that we are renewing our awareness of the divine mystery that is manifesting itself in and as each thought that arises, endures, and passes away within us.

English psychologists call an automatist, which is to say, a person who appears at times to lend her organism to beings imperceptible to our senses, in order to enable them to manifest themselves to us.

At the same time, knowing how impartial the bailiff was, he begged him to accompany the doctors and officials to the convent, and to be present at the exorcisms, and should any sign of real possession manifest itself, to sequester the afflicted nuns at once, and cause them to be examined by other persons than Mignon and Barre, whom he had such good cause to distrust.

Apache is manifested chiefly in their basketry, which shows much taste in form and decoration.

The reasons for appreciating Bernard Longueville were much more manifest.

It is therefore manifest that the sacraments of the Old Law were not endowed with any power by which they conduced to the bestowal of justifying grace: and they merely signified faith by which men were justified.

Chimpanion manifested as a male, speaking a pidgin patois of English and French, in a belch-riven bonobo accent.