EMOTE


Meaning of EMOTE in English

ə̇ˈmōt, ēˈ-, usu -ōd.+V intransitive verb

( -ed/-ing/-s )

Etymology: back-formation from emotion

: to give expression to emotion

June is the month when more Americans emote than at any other time of year — E.A.Weeks

knowledge about how man emotes and about what structures in the brain and what physiological devices therein produce emotions — Journal American Medical Association

especially in or as if in a play or movie

the producers, realizing that picture audiences unconsciously yearn for a little more expression than is common on the lacquered faces of the contemporary screen stars, make Miss Swanson emote with a physical abandon — H.E.Clurman

often falsely or in a manner befitting a ham actor

but more often she assaults her readers with rhetoric … emotes, postures, haranques — Time

Webster's New International English Dictionary.      Новый международный словарь английского языка Webster.