From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishevincee‧vince /ɪˈvɪns/ verb [transitive] formalSHOW A FEELING OR ATTITUDE to show a feeling or have a quality in a way that people can easily notice She evinced no surprise at seeing them together.→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
evince• In her work training catechists she had evinced a talent for drawing volunteers more deeply into Church ministries.• To respect the evidence is only to evince an unsubtle mind.• Theologians evince, if anything, even less enthusiasm for the subject than art historians.• Gumbel has evinced little interest in the new network so far.• These evinced no embarrassment at the encounter.• His driver, a phlegmatic man in middle age, evinced no surprise.• The singer evinced one bad habit in the Mahler group, a tendency to scoop into opening phrases.Origin evince (1500-1600) Latin evincere, from vincere “to defeat”