EMERGE


Meaning of EMERGE in English

verb

1 come out

ADVERB

▪ slowly

▪ suddenly

▪ eventually , finally

▪ fully

The plant has fully ~d from the soil.

PREPOSITION

▪ from

The world is only slowly emerging from recession.

▪ into

They suddenly ~d into brilliant sunshine.

▪ out of

the musical forms that ~d out of the American black experience

PHRASES

▪ ~ fully formed

His enormous talent had ~d fully formed.

2 become known

ADVERB

▪ clearly , strongly

One thing ~s very clearly from this study.

▪ gradually

▪ quickly , soon

The answer to the problem quickly ~d.

▪ recently

▪ later , subsequently

It subsequently ~d that he had known about the deal all along.

▪ eventually , ultimately

What eventually ~d from the election disaster was a realization that it was time for change.

VERB + EMERGE

▪ begin to , start to

Problems with this drug are now beginning to ~.

PREPOSITION

▪ from

Several facts started to ~ from my investigation.

3 start to exist

ADVERB

▪ rapidly

The Pacific region has rapidly ~d as a leading force on the world stage.

▪ gradually , slowly

▪ naturally

PHRASES

▪ newly ~d , newly emerging

newly emerging areas of science

Emerge is used with these nouns as the subject: ↑ butterfly , ↑ consensus , ↑ detail , ↑ difference , ↑ evidence , ↑ explanation , ↑ finding , ↑ idea , ↑ inconsistency , ↑ leaf , ↑ message , ↑ news , ↑ party , ↑ pattern , ↑ phenomenon , ↑ picture , ↑ problem , ↑ regime , ↑ relationship , ↑ report , ↑ shape , ↑ shoot , ↑ story , ↑ sun , ↑ theme , ↑ thread , ↑ trend , ↑ truth , ↑ word

Oxford Collocations English Dictionary.      Оксфордский английский словарь словосочетаний .