Langimage
English

consciously-demonstrated

|con-scious-ly-dem-on-strat-ed|

C1

/ˈkɒnʃəsli ˈdɛmənˌstreɪtɪd/

deliberately shown

Etymology
Etymology Information

'consciously-demonstrated' originates from the combination of 'consciously' and 'demonstrated'. 'Consciously' comes from Latin 'conscius', meaning 'knowing with others or in oneself', and 'demonstrated' comes from Latin 'demonstrare', meaning 'to point out or show'.

Historical Evolution

'Consciously' evolved from the Latin 'conscius' through Old French 'conscient', and 'demonstrated' evolved from Latin 'demonstrare' through Old French 'demontrer'.

Meaning Changes

Initially, 'consciously' meant 'knowing with others', and 'demonstrated' meant 'to point out'. Over time, they combined to mean 'deliberately shown with awareness'.

Meanings by Part of Speech

Adjective 1

deliberately shown or exhibited with awareness and intention.

Her kindness was consciously-demonstrated through her actions.

Synonyms

Antonyms

Last updated: 2025/05/22 23:30