Emanate \Em"a*nate\, a. Issuing forth; emanant. [R.]
Emanate \Em"a*nate\, v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Emanated}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Emanating}.] [L. emanare, emanatum, to emanate; e out + manare to flow, prob. for madnare, and akin to madere to be wet, drip, madidus wet, drenched, drunk, Gr. ?, ?, wet, ? to be wet, Skr. mad to boil, matta drunk. Cf. {Emane}.] 1. To issue forth from a source; to flow out from more or less constantly; as, fragrance emanates from flowers.
2. To proceed from, as a source or fountain; to take origin; to arise, to originate.
That subsisting from of government from which all special laws emanate. --De Quincey.
Syn: To flow; arise; proceed; issue; originate.
"Hereafter, no information will emanate from my chambers," U.S. District Judge Gerhard A. Gesell said in a letter to Carl Stern of NBC News who has been acting as a news media liaison with the court since the trial began.
The area suffers blistering yearly droughts because of the lack of infrastructure to harness the country's rainfall. Despite the government's current cash crisis, Brazil's social problems do not emanate from a lack of funds.
Slow. And heavily amplified, so that voices usually emanate from nowhere near the actors and a heavy echo follows every utterance. The next problem is John Tams's music.
Also, the message said, the Arabic broadcasts emanate from relay stations that are west of Iraq and thus are in daylight while the Iraqi jamming stations are in darkness.
He's also tracking the rebuilding possibilities that could emanate from peace in the Persian Gulf, Angola and Afghanistan.