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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Manifested

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.

Wiktionary
manifested

vb. (en-past of: manifest)

Usage examples of "manifested".

It will do no good, at this point, to claim that Buddhists are participating in the same Logos that was uniquely manifested in Jesus.

Now, seemingly, in the work of the Incarnation alone is an infinite effect of the Divine power manifested in a special manner by which power things infinitely distant are united, inasmuch as it has been brought about that man is God.

Consequently, since it behooved a man, being of the nobler sex, to assume, it was becoming that the liberation of the female sex should be manifested in that man being born of a woman.

Whether He should have made Himself known, or should He rather have been manifested by others?

And therefore Christ was made known first through other creatures, and afterwards He Himself manifested Himself perfectly.

Hence the wisdom given to Christ was not useless, because at a suitable time He manifested Himself.

Birth Should Have Been Manifested by Means of the Angels and the Star?

And as our Lord, when He was able to speak, was announced by heralds who spoke, so before He could speak He was manifested by speechless elements.

That which of itself is hidden needs to be manifested, but not that which in itself is manifest.

Therefore it was becoming that in that baptism the Father should be manifested by a voice.

The Father is manifested by the voice, only as producing the voice or speaking by it.

And since it is proper to the Father to produce the Word--that is, to utter or to speak--therefore was it most becoming that the Father should be manifested by a voice, because the voice designates the word.

And just as the form of the dove, in which the Holy Ghost was made manifest, is not the Nature of the Holy Ghost, nor is the form of man in which the Son Himself was manifested, the very Nature of the Son of God, so neither does the voice belong to the Nature of the Word or of the Father who spoke.

By His transfiguration Christ manifested to His disciples the glory of His body, which belongs to men only.

Resurrection ought to have been manifested to all men or only to some special individuals?