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evoke

 - 2 dictionary results

e⋅voke

[i-vohk]
–verb (used with object), e⋅voked, e⋅vok⋅ing.
1. to call up or produce (memories, feelings, etc.): to evoke a memory.
2. to elicit or draw forth: His comment evoked protests from the shocked listeners.
3. to call up; cause to appear; summon: to evoke a spirit from the dead.
4. to produce or suggest through artistry and imagination a vivid impression of reality: a short passage that manages to evoke the smells, colors, sounds, and shapes of that metropolis.

Origin:
1615–25; < L ēvocāre, equiv. to ē- e- + vocāre to call (akin to vōx voice )


e⋅vok⋅er, noun
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2009.
Cite This Source Link To evoke
e·voke   (ĭ-vōk')   
tr.v.   e·voked, e·vok·ing, e·vokes
  1. To summon or call forth: actions that evoked our mistrust.

  2. To call to mind by naming, citing, or suggesting: songs that evoke old memories.

  3. To create anew, especially by means of the imagination: a novel that evokes the Depression in accurate detail.


[Latin ēvocāre : ē-, ex-, ex- + vocāre, to call; see wekw- in Indo-European roots.]
ev'o·ca·ble (ěv'ə-kə-bəl, ĭ-vō'kə-) adj.
Synonyms: These verbs mean to draw forth or bring out something latent, hidden, or unexpressed: evoke laughter; educed significance from the event; trying to elicit the truth.
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
Copyright © 2009 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
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