3 to show something clearly, through signs or actions: --
Kipper manifested no joy or disappointment, but remained in his chair, calm and unconcerned.
5 a list of the people and goods carried on a ship or plane: --
The essays are all admirably clear, with copious footnotes which manifest a wide range of relevant reading.
We had not suspected that in all these the enemy manifested itself, but we ascribed them, instead, to the lack of experience, routines and education.
If the work is successful, spiritual well-being of connection is manifest as appreciation for life, love of others, and feeling connected to deceased loved ones.
The third part examines how trust is manifest in electronic service communities.
Furthermore, children manifested a marked increase in pretend-play with toy objects that were replicas of real objects specifically designed to stand for other objects.
Stated another way, surface-level (or allophonic) distinctions are realized in high frequency words, whereas underlying lexical distinctions are manifested in low frequency words.
The predominance of present time - both onstage and in the music - which characterises opera is manifested primarily in solo singing.
Revulsion to dismemberment (or to creating a member where there was none, as it were) further manifests itself in debates over the acceptability of transsexuals.