different between evoke vs evoked
evoke
English
Etymology
From French évoquer, from Latin ?voc? (“to call out, summon”), from ex (“out”) and voc? (“call”). Akin to voice.
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -??k
- (UK) IPA(key): /??v??k/
- (US) IPA(key): /??vo?k/
Verb
evoke (third-person singular simple present evokes, present participle evoking, simple past and past participle evoked)
- To call out; to draw out or bring forth.
- To cause the manifestation of something (emotion, picture, etc.) in someone's mind or imagination.
- To elicit a response.
Derived terms
- evocable
- reëvoke
Related terms
- evocate
Translations
evoke From the web:
- what evoke means
- what evokes emotion
- what evokes the brightness of color
- what evokes memories
- what evokes nostalgia
- what evokes consumers engagement on facebook
- what does evoke.mean
- evoke defined
evoked
English
Verb
evoked
- simple past tense and past participle of evoke
evoked From the web:
- what evoked mean
- what's evoked set
- what evoked potential tests
- evoked what does this mean
- what is evoked potential
- what does evoked potential test for
- what can evoked potential diagnose
- what is evoked culture
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