0 past simple and past participle of emanate --
1 to express a quality or feeling through the way that you look and behave: --
Four overlapping problems emanated from this type of agency.
It was clearly widespread from the earliest years of the reign and, like so much rumour and news, it probably emanated from the capital originally.
The strategy of using stock music emanated from budgetary restriction as much as, if not more so than for reasons of aesthetic control.
A piece of music did not just represent its implied function; it both embodied and emanated it.
This research emanated from the observation that in care practice, older women were labelled as 'frail little old ladies ' in case meetings and files.
The right-running wave in the top right of each photograph emanated from a joint between the front and interchangeable rear portion of the shock generator.
Instantly, from five or six corners of the hall emanated five or six whistles.
But it also emanated from his libertarian views, which meant that he was strongly against anti-smoking publicity.