surface
verb (TOP)
[ I ]
to rise to the surface of water:
The submarine surfaced a few miles off the coast.
[ T ]
to cover a road or other area with a hard surface
surface verb (KNOWN)
[ I ]
If a feeling or information surfaces, it becomes known:
Doubts are beginning to surface about whether the right decision has been made.
A rumour has surfaced that the company is about to go out of business.
surface verb (OUT OF BED)
[ I ] informal
to get out of bed:
He never surfaces until at least 11.00 a.m. on a Sunday.
surfaced 용례들
But since the late 1960s many sheep bones have surfaced in just such sites.
The issue of political interference in the police arose early on in his presidency, and has surfaced periodically ever since.
The raters produced highly correlated scores and were self-consistent, but significant differences in overall severity surfaced.
Concern about these problems surfaced well before the end of the nineteenth century.
The rivalries that surfaced took shape according to various criteria of social differentiation, including age, gender, wealth, and profession.
After two weeks the girls surfaced, were taken into police custody and handed over to their family.
Moments of gratitude and sorrow surfaced for participants as they described people, projects, and activities that were important in their lives.
Sexuality was never buried: it surfaced thanks to devices likely to please local audiences.
There was also a kind of history writing that sought to construct a ' progressive ' intellectual tradition, which surfaced in the years leading up to independence.
Many variants of the realist thesis were put forward, and competing explanations from outside the tradition also surfaced.
Only recently has chemical communication surfaced as a likely mechanism by which animals display infection status.
The discussion in that seminar room foregrounded for me some of the issues of pronunciation teaching which surfaced in the years that followed.
The political manoeuvres over the classroom building project surfaced again in local elections in 2004.
The regional development question and urban decentralization were very much a part of the demand politics that surfaced after the mid-sixties.
Despite the plethora of theories that have surfaced over the years, there are really only two ways of explaining visual experience.