ostensible
adj/ɒˈstɛns.ɪ.bəl/UK/ɑˈstɛns.ɪ.bəl/US
Etymology
Borrowed from French ostensible, formed with the suffix -ible, from Latin ostensus, the past participle of ostendō (“show”), itself from obs- (“in front of”) (akin to ob- (“in the way”)) + tendō (“stretch”) (akin to Ancient Greek τείνω (teínō)). Cf. also Medieval Latin ostensibilis.
- derived from ostensus
- borrowed from ostensible
Definitions
Apparent, evident
Apparent, evident; meant for open display.
- Motives, of course, may be mixed; but this only means that a man aims at a variety of goals by means of the same course of action. Similarly a man may have a strong motive or a weak one, an ulterior motive or an ostensible one.
Appearing as such
Appearing as such; being such in appearance; professed, supposed (rather than demonstrably true or real).
- The ostensible reason for his visit to New York was to see his mother, but the real reason was to get to the Yankees game the next day.
The neighborhood
- antonymulteriorantonym(s) of “meant for open display”
- neighborostensive
- neighborostentatious
- neighborostentation
Derived
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for ostensible. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA