- demonstrate
-
I
(establish) verb
authenticate, circumstantiate, clarify, confirm, corroborate, display, elucidate, evince, exemplify, exhibit, illuminate, illustrate, indicate, instruct, lay out, make clear, make evident, make plain, manifest, perform, point out, prove, set forth, show, show by example, substantiate, support, sustain, teach by example, uphold, validate, verify
II
(protest) verb
challenge, clamor, complain publicly, contravene, controvert, counter, counteract, cry out against, declare opposition, demur, denounce, dissent, expostulate, express disagreement, express disapproval, express dissatisfaction, impugn, inveigh, march, negate, object, oppose, parade, picket, rail, reject, reluct, remonstrate, resist, show disagreement, show disapproval, show opinion publicly, show opposition, spurn, state opposition, storm, traverse
III
index
bear (adduce), clarify, communicate, construe (translate), disagree, display, document, elucidate, establish (show), evidence, evince, exemplify, exhibit, explain, illustrate, manifest, picket, present (introduce), produce (offer to view), prove, reason (persuade), signify (denote), signify (inform), substantiate, unveil
Burton's Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006
- demonstrate
-
v.To show; to prove the truth of something by using logic and evidence; to use practical illustrations to show how something works or happens.n.demonstration
The Essential Law Dictionary. — Sphinx Publishing, An imprint of Sourcebooks, Inc. Amy Hackney Blackwell. 2008.
Look at other dictionaries:
Demonstrate — Dem on*strate (?; 277), v. t. [L. demonstratus, p. p. of demonstrare to demonstrate; de + monstrare to show. See {Monster}.] 1. To point out; to show; to exhibit; to make evident. Shak. [1913 Webster] 2. To show, or make evident, by reasoning or… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
demonstrate — UK US /ˈdemənstreɪt/ verb [T] ► to show something, or show someone how to do something, or how a system or product works: »They demonstrated how big savings could be made with the help of the new machinery. demonstrate sth to sb » We asked them… … Financial and business terms
demonstrate — [v1] display, show authenticate, determine, establish, evidence, evince, exhibit, expose, flaunt, indicate, make evident, make out, manifest, prove, roll out*, show and tell*, test, testify to, trot out*, try, validate; concept 97 Ant. conceal,… … New thesaurus
demonstrate — 1550s, to point out, from L. demonstratus, pp. of demonstrare (see DEMONSTRATION (Cf. demonstration)). Meaning to point out by argument or deduction is from 1570s. Related: Demonstrated; demonstrating … Etymology dictionary
demonstrate — 1 manifest, evince, *show, evidence Analogous words: *reveal, disclose, discover, betray: display, exhibit, parade, flaunt, expose, *show Contrasted words: *hide, conceal, secrete: dissemble, cloak, mask, *disguise … New Dictionary of Synonyms
demonstrate — ► VERB 1) clearly show that (something) exists or is true. 2) give a practical exhibition and explanation of. 3) express or reveal (a feeling or quality) by one s actions. 4) take part in a public demonstration. DERIVATIVES demonstrator noun.… … English terms dictionary
demonstrate — [dem′ən strāt΄] vt. demonstrated, demonstrating [< L demonstratus, pp. of demonstrare, to point out, show < de , out, from + monstrare, to show: see MUSTER] 1. to show by reasoning; prove 2. to explain or make clear by using examples,… … English World dictionary
demonstrate — [[t]de̱mənstreɪt[/t]] ♦♦♦ demonstrates, demonstrating, demonstrated 1) VERB To demonstrate a fact means to make it clear to people. [V n] The study also demonstrated a direct link between obesity and mortality... [V that] You have to demonstrate… … English dictionary
demonstrate — v. 1) to demonstrate convincingly 2) (B) ( to explain by showing ) they demonstrated the new invention to us 3) (D; intr.) ( to protest by marching ) to demonstrate against (the students demonstrated against the government) 4) (D; intr.) ( to… … Combinatory dictionary
demonstrate — dem|on|strate W2 [ˈdemənstreıt] v [Date: 1500 1600; : Latin; Origin: demonstratus, past participle of demonstrare, from monstrare to show ] 1.) [T] to show or prove something clearly ▪ The study demonstrates the link between poverty and… … Dictionary of contemporary English