TOP

Definition of evident adjective from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

evident

adjective
 
/ˈevɪdənt/
 
/ˈevɪdənt/
jump to other results
  1. clear; easily seen synonym obvious
    • The orchestra played with evident enjoyment.
    • evident (to somebody) (that…) It has now become evident to us that a mistake has been made.
    • evident in/from something The growing interest in history is clearly evident in the number of people visiting museums and country houses.
    Synonyms clearclearobvious apparent evident plainThese words all describe something that is easy to see or understand.clear easy to see or understand and leaving no doubts:
    • It was quite clear to me that she was lying.
    obvious easy to see or understand:
    • It’s obvious from what he said that something is wrong.
    apparent [not usually before noun] (rather formal) easy to see or understand:
    • It was apparent from her face that she was really upset.
    evident (rather formal) easy to see or understand:
    • The orchestra played with evident enjoyment.
    plain easy to see or understand:
    • He made it very plain that he wanted us to leave.
    which word?
    • These words all have almost exactly the same meaning. There are slight differences in register and patterns of use. If you make something clear/​plain, you do so deliberately because you want people to understand something; if you make something obvious, you usually do it without meaning to:
      • I hope I make myself obvious.
      • Try not to make it so clear/​plain.
      In the expressions clear majority, for obvious reasons, for no apparent reason and plain to see, none of the other words can be used instead. You can have a clear/​an obvious/​a plain case of something but not:
      • an evident case of something.
    Patterns
    • clear/​obvious/​apparent/​evident/​plain to somebody/​something
    • clear/​obvious/​apparent/​evident/​plain that/​what/​who/​how/​where/​why…
    • to seem/​become/​make something clear/​obvious/​apparent/​evident/​plain
    • perfectly/​quite/​very clear/​obvious/​apparent/​evident/​plain
    see also self-evident
    Extra Examples
    • The commitment to local products is equally evident on the restaurant's wine list.
    • The silence of the forest was made evident by the occasional snap of a twig.
    • The strain of her work schedule became painfully evident as she jetted from New York to London and on to Milan.
    • Their symptoms may be less evident to their caregivers.
    • It was evident to me that the mission would fail.
    • It is already evident that new roads only generate new traffic.
    • It was fairly evident from her tone of voice that she disapproved.
    • Those characteristics are abundantly evident in Webster's essay.
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryverbs
    • appear
    • be
    • seem
    adverb
    • extremely
    • fairly
    • very
    preposition
    • from
    • in
    • to
    See full entry
    Word Originlate Middle English: from Old French, or from Latin evidens, evident- ‘obvious to the eye or mind’, from e- (variant of ex-) ‘out’ + videre ‘to see’.
See evident in the Oxford Advanced American DictionarySee evident in the Oxford Learner's Dictionary of Academic English

Other results

All matches
dizzy
adjective
 
 
From the Topic
Health problems
C1
Oxford Learner's Dictionaries Word of the Day