0 past simple and past participle of emanate
1 to express a quality or feeling through the way that you look and behave:
That aura emanated only slightly from the poetry, and more powerfully from the gendered nature of critics' acclaim.
The authors emphasise that their conclusions emanated from published facts and documents.
As with the majority of the attacks against individuals, most of the reports of plant 'vandalism' emanated from market towns.
These pressures upon the jobber emanated from three sources.
This impulse emanated from precisely those groups of medical professionals and volunteers that had championed the modern drive to make the city liveable.
The most negative foreign research results emanated from programmes based on a more drug-liberal approach.
The capital's energy, unlike other cities, emanated from its palace and not from its trade centres or markets.
But it also emanated from his libertarian views, which meant that he was strongly against anti-smoking publicity.