What is another word for is manifest?

Pronunciation: [ɪz mˈanɪfˌɛst] (IPA)

When a situation, feeling, or phenomenon is clear and obvious, we can use the phrase "is manifest" to describe it. There are several synonyms that can convey the same meaning, including "evident," "apparent," "obvious," "plain," "clear," and "visible." These terms all indicate that something is easily seen or understood, requiring little or no explanation. Additionally, words like "manifested," "expressed," or "revealed" can be used to indicate that something has been made known or brought to our attention in some way. By using different synonyms, we can add variety and nuance to our writing or speech, conveying a deeper understanding of the situation at hand.

What are the hypernyms for Is manifest?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

What are the opposite words for is manifest?

The phrase "is manifest" refers to something that is readily apparent or obvious. Antonyms for this phrase could include "is obscure," "is unclear," or "is hidden." When something is obscure or unclear, it may require additional investigation or analysis to determine its true nature or meaning. Something that is hidden may require careful searching or exploration to uncover. Using antonyms for "is manifest" can help emphasize the complexity or mystery of a particular topic or situation, and can encourage people to look deeper into the issue at hand.

What are the antonyms for Is manifest?

Famous quotes with Is manifest

  • Our abode in this world is transitory, our life therein is but a loan, our breaths are numbered and our indolence is manifest.
    Abu Bakr
  • I am a subject of the British Crown, but whenever I have to choose between the interests of England and Canada it is manifest to me that the interests of my country are identical with those of the United States of America.
    Wilfrid Laurier
  • When I say I love Eastland, it sounds preposterous--a man who brutalizes people. But *you* love him or you wouldn't be here. You're going to Mississippi to create social change--and you love Eastland in your desire to create conditions which will redeem his children. Loving your enemy is manifest in putting your arms not around the man but around the social situation, to take power from those who misuse it--at which point they can become human too.
    Bayard Rustin
  • Hereby it is manifest, that during the time men live without a common Power to keep them all in awe, they are in that conditions called Warre; and such a warre, as is of every man, against every man.
    Thomas Hobbes
  • There is... something which is in energy only; and there is something which is both in energy and capacity. ...of relatives, one is predicated as according to excess and defect: another according to the effective and passive, and, in short, the motive, and that which may be moved... Motion, however, has not a substance separate from things... But each of the categories subsists in a twofold manner in all things. Thus... one thing pertaining to it is form, and another privation. ...So the species of motion and mutation are as many as those of being. But since in every genus of things, there is that which is in entelecheia, and that which is in capacity; motion is the entelecheia of that which is in capacity... That there is energy, therefore, and that a thing then happens to be moved, when this energy exists, and neither prior nor posterior to it, is manifest. ... [N]either motion nor mutation can be placed in any other genus; nor have those who have advanced a different opinion concerning it spoken rightly. ...for by some motion is said to be difference, inequality, and non-being; though it is not necessary that any of these should be moved... Neither is mutation into these, nor from these, rather than from their opposites. ...The cause, however, why motion appears to be indefinite, is because it can neither be simply referred to the capacity, nor to the energy of beings. ...[I]t is difficult to apprehend what motion is: for it is necessary to refer it either to privation, or to capacity, or to simple energy; but it does not appear that it can be any of these. The above-mentioned mode, therfore remains, viz. that it is a certain energy; but... difficult to be perceived, but which may have a subsistence.
    Aristotle

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