Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
The vigor and the musical quality, which emanate from the songs, catch on to people of all ages and cultural backgrounds.
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Sounds of bowling pins dropping emanate from said building.
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When a smell begins to emanate from the cellar, the children tell him their dead dog is encased in the cement.
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Highlighted cheeks and wrinkles heighten the effect of sadness and helplessness, which directly emanate from the character.
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An illusion of will may, however, emanate from the ability of the process to maximize mean fitness, making the process goal seeking.
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There, he would park his taxi and wait for a harrowed traveller to emanate from the building's sliding doors.
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Steam would emanate from below, deep within the earth, and bestow clairvoyance.
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The term is also used to describe the young child's tendency to affirm the existence of punishments that emanate from things themselves...
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It is common to model this projection operation by rays that emanate from the camera, passing through its center of projection.
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Black propaganda purports to emanate from a source other than the true source.
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