word choice - English Language Usage Stack Exchange Angry voices emanated from the room (Cambridge) Wonderful smells were emanating from the kitchen ( Logman) 1 2 [with object] Give out or emit (a feeling, quality, or sensation): He emanated a powerful brooding air He emanates tranquility (Longman) And secondly, I cannot understand noun form of the word 'to emanate'
Meaning of emanating in the enclosed paragraph The light peaked the tallest mountain, making a beautiful contrast between gleaming white snow and the violet sky, emanating a powerful glow The sheer awesomeness and force of the strange energy seemingly reached down to the heavens In the above paragraph, the word emanating is in bold The definition of emanating is to come from a source
How to use word emanate - English Language Usage Stack Exchange The meaning of emanate as listed by Oxford Dictionary is: EMANATE verb 1 [no object] (emanate from) (of a feeling, quality, or sensation) issue or spread out from (a source): warmth emanated from the fireplace she felt an undeniable charm emanating from him 2 originate from; be produced by: the proposals emanated from a committee 3 [with object] give out or emit (a feeling, quality, or
single word requests - Emanate from a place, not a source - English . . . But can it also be used in reference to a place? e g "a strange glow was emanating from the middle of my dark apartment" - the middle of the dark apartment being the spot or location from which the glow is coming from, not its actual source (which can be, for example, an unperceived ghost)
What is the longest palindromic phrase? - English Language Usage . . . 4 The longest coherent palindromic statement sentence I've ever heard of was reported by Brendan Gill of The New Yorker, which I encountered in a book of his some years ago T Eliot, top bard, notes putrid tang emanating, is sad; I'd assign it a name: gnat dirt upset on drab pot toilet
What is the word for the smell of rain? I'm surprised this question isn't a dupe, and this word has never been offered as an answer to this question before It's a famous example of a specific word for a specific sensation petrichor ˈpeˌtrīkôr noun a pleasant smell that frequently accompanies the first rain after a long period of warm, dry weather other than the petrichor emanating from the rapidly drying grass, there was