evident

英 ['evɪd(ə)nt] 美['ɛvɪdənt]
  • adj. 明显的;明白的

助记提示


1. 俺为了等它,穿着一定要明显。

英文词源


evident
evident: [14] Something that is evident is literally something that can be ‘seen’. The word comes via Old French from Latin ēvidēns ‘clear, obvious’, a compound formed from the intensive prefix ex- and the present participle of videre ‘see’ (source of English vision). The Latin derivative ēvidentia (from which English gets evidence [13]) meant originally ‘distinction’ and later ‘proof’, basis of the main current sense of evidence, ‘testimony which establishes the facts’.
=> view, vision
evident (adj.)
late 14c., from Old French evident and directly from Latin evidentem (nominative evidens) "perceptible, clear, obvious, apparent" from ex- "fully, out of" (see ex-) + videntem (nominative videns), present participle of videre "to see" (see vision).

双语例句


1. The threat of inflation is already evident in bond prices.
通货膨胀的危险在证券价格上已经表现得很明显。

来自柯林斯例句

2. The privations of monastery life were evident in his appearance.
从他的外表来看可以明显看出修道院生活的清贫。

来自柯林斯例句

3. The immense difficulties facing European businessmen in Russia were only too evident.
在俄罗斯的欧洲商人所面临的巨大困难是显而易见的。

来自柯林斯例句

4. It was evident that someone had gone through my possessions.
显然有人翻过我的物品。

来自柯林斯例句

5. Mr Wills unfolds his story with evident enjoyment.
威尔斯先生喜形于色地讲述自己的经历。

来自柯林斯例句