evince

[ ih-vins ]
/ ɪˈvɪns /

verb (used with object), e·vinced, e·vinc·ing.

to show clearly; make evident or manifest; prove.
to reveal the possession of (a quality, trait, etc.).

Origin of evince

1600–10; < Latin ēvincere to conquer, overcome, carry one's point, equivalent to ē- e-1 + vincere to conquer

synonym study for evince

1. See display.

OTHER WORDS FROM evince

e·vin·ci·ble, adjective non·e·vin·ci·ble, adjective un·e·vinced, adjective un·e·vin·ci·ble, adjective

Example sentences from the Web for evince

British Dictionary definitions for evince

evince
/ (ɪˈvɪns) /

verb

(tr) to make evident; show (something, such as an emotion) clearly

Derived forms of evince

evincible, adjective evincive, adjective

Word Origin for evince

C17: from Latin ēvincere to overcome; see evict

usage for evince

Evince is sometimes wrongly used where evoke is meant: the proposal evoked (not evinced) a storm of protest