manifestus

Etymology
From + uncertain second element; perhaps, from. More at.

Pronunciation

 * Bennett 1907 considers the length of the "e" 'very uncertain', citing "[mani]féstvm" from C.I.L. i. p. 319 (a fragment of the Fasti Praenestini, month of December) as potential inscriptional evidence of a long vowel. Spanish manifiesto cannot be an entirely inherited form, but it might be a semi-learned form with regular development of -ie- from -ĕ-. However, the Spanish form does not exclude the possibility of an original -ē- that underwent later shortening or analogical replacement, as in Spanish  from Latin.
 * Bennett 1907 considers the length of the "e" 'very uncertain', citing "[mani]féstvm" from C.I.L. i. p. 319 (a fragment of the Fasti Praenestini, month of December) as potential inscriptional evidence of a long vowel. Spanish manifiesto cannot be an entirely inherited form, but it might be a semi-learned form with regular development of -ie- from -ĕ-. However, the Spanish form does not exclude the possibility of an original -ē- that underwent later shortening or analogical replacement, as in Spanish  from Latin.

Adjective

 * 1) manifest, specifically
 * 2)  caught in the act, plainly guilty
 * 3)  detected in the act, flagrant, plain
 * 4)  obvious, self-evident
 * 5)  clearly visible, conspicuous; unmistakeable, undoubted
 * 6) * c. 25 ,, , Letter 15: "Sappho Phaoni":
 * Sūme fidem et pharetram—fīēs manifestus Apollō
 * Take up a lyre and a quiver, and you'll become Apollo manifest
 * 1)  plain, clear
 * 1)  plain, clear