Emanate in a sentence as a verb

It's not as though language has rules that emanate from axioms.

The liver issues appear to emanate from the leaves.

Do you have a vision grand enough that you emanate that someone is willing to give up $150k to join you on your dream?

It's that FUD is the very thing they emanate themselves!Or, in other words, in Google's case, the FUD is real.

So the office romance per se wasn't the problem but the system that allowed concretely bad things to emanate from it.

I flagged this article because I can't imagine a civil, productive, germane thread that could emanate from it.

If I remember correctly, instead of only allowing three edges to emanate from a vertex, you can have four.

It really is remarkable the delusions of graduation that emanate from a desk with even the most paltry of P&L's for the week.

What gas could possible emanate from a flash drive that wouldn't emanate from any other electronic device?

The technologies emanate from early-stage companies and start-ups with which IQT has a relationship.

Our memories, habits, traits, tendencies, affinities, aversions, and reactions all emanate from our mind.

Elegance, simplicity, beauty.. do those words emanate from Ruby in waves or from your inability to give a technical description?

It's timeless, good design, and by consequence looks great - it's form and shape unconsciously emanate all these characteristics to us.> True, and very interesting.

> My question would be, how would they know you don't have a TV if you don't tell them?You may find this hard to believe, but they drive around in a high-tech van and monitor the kinds of signals that emanate from a TV set.

The problem is that atmospheric Mach numbers don't follow from first principles, and the Wolfram Alpha values emanate from an empirically derived approximation.

The clear distinction between the two is mostly a self-identification that tends to emanate from libertarian and anarcho-capitalist groups.

Emanate definitions

verb

proceed or issue forth, as from a source; "Water emanates from this hole in the ground"

verb

give out (breath or an odor); "The chimney exhales a thick smoke"

See also: exhale