All 50 Uses of
apparent
in
The Da Vinci Code
- The idiom apparently didn't translate.†
Chpt 4 *
- Apparently, the curator's private office had become DCPJ's makeshift command post for the evening.†
Chpt 4
- Saunière's left index finger was also bloody, apparently having been dipped into the wound to create the most unsettling aspect of his own macabre deathbed; using his own blood as ink, and employing his own naked abdomen as a canvas, Saunière had drawn a simple symbol on his flesh—five straight lines that intersected to form a five-pointed star.†
Chpt 6
- Saunière had apparently lay down and swung the pen around himself in several long arcs, essentially inscribing himself inside a circle.†
Chpt 8
- You told me Saunière was attacked in his office by someone he had apparently invited in.†
Chpt 8
- Apparently they called Mr. Langdon's hotel, and the concierge told them Mr. Langdon had been collected by a DCPJ agent.†
Chpt 9
- Fache's brow furrowed in apparent confusion.†
Chpt 9
- Apparently, 454 was Sophie's remote access code for picking up her messages while away from home.†
Chpt 9
- He shot an anxious glance at Langdon, who stood nearby with the phone pressed to his ear, apparently still listening to his phone message from the U.S. Embassy.†
Chpt 11-12
- Apparently not.†
Chpt 11-12
- Apparently Sophie had been in no mood to stop by and chat with the other officers on her way out.†
Chpt 11-12
- She apparently believed the curator had left her a cryptic postscript telling her to find Langdon.†
Chpt 13-14
- Sophie and Jacques Saunière apparently had some kind of special relationship.†
Chpt 13-14
- I was not aware of this, and it seems neither was the director until a coworker informed him, but apparently Sophie Neveu is Jacques Saunière's granddaughter.†
Chpt 17-18
- Eyeing the gray marble panel that covered the apparent hollow in the floor, he realized he could not possibly shatter the covering without making considerable noise.†
Chpt 29-30
- Down the street, the two DCPJ officers who stood beside their cars were now staring in their direction, apparently curious about the headlights that had halted so abruptly up the street from them.†
Chpt 31-32
- The Templars' potent treasure trove of documents, which had apparently been their source of power, was Clement's true objective, but it slipped through his fingers.†
Chpt 37-38
- Faukman swallowed, apparently unable to say the words.†
Chpt 37-38
- The four men looked at one another for a moment as if there were something more to say, but apparently there was not.†
Chpt 41-42
- This key apparently required no turning.†
Chpt 41-42
- Discretion was apparently not part of the vocabulary of a 15euro-per-hour watchman.†
Chpt 43-44
- Langdon stood beside her, both of them staring at the small treasure chest her grandfather apparently had sent them to retrieve.†
Chpt 43-44
- The dimensions of the box, the apparent weight of its contents, and a Priory symbol for the Grail all seemed to imply one unfathomable conclusion.†
Chpt 43-44
- The answers were apparently going to have to wait.†
Chpt 47-48
- Apparently the armor in this "armored truck" referred only to the cargo hold and not the front end.†
Chpt 51-52
- A prim and elegant butler stood before them, making final adjustments on the white tie and tuxedo he had apparently just donned.†
Chpt 53-54
- Langdon apparently decided the unseemly metaphor had gone far enough.†
Chpt 53-54
- Teabing apparently had a similar thought.†
Chpt 55-56
- Apparently the owner preferred a different kind of horsepower; the stalls had been converted into an impressive automotive parking facility.†
Chpt 65-66
- The police apparently want you badly enough to have tailed you to my home.†
Chpt 67-68
- Teabing was apparently on the side of making the documents public.†
Chpt 67-68
- Apparently, the vial of vinegar they had heard earlier was inside this smaller cryptex.†
Chpt 77-78
- The pilot had agreed, apparently believing the far-fetched story of a gas leak.†
Chpt 81-82
- "The devil you will!" the Kent chief inspector declared, apparently knowing enough about executive airfields to suspect Simon Edwards might well lie about the plane's occupants in an effort to keep Teabing's business at Biggin Hill.†
Chpt 81-82
- Despite the apparent straightforwardness of the verse, Langdon still had no idea who this knight was or where he was buried.†
Chpt 81-82
- Apparently there existed some other five-letter reference to the Rose's seeded womb.†
Chpt 81-82
- The heavyset man, apparently the leader, stepped forward using metal crutches.†
Chpt 83-84
- Young man, apparently you are new here.†
Chpt 83-84
- Rémy smiled, seeming to have no trouble with the apparent coincidence of Langdon's chosen refuge.†
Chpt 83-84
- The men were moving slowly, still only at the third knight, apparently having no luck either.†
Chpt 85-86
- Mr. Wren, apparently your family's philanthropy does not buy you the time it used to, so perhaps we should take out the ashes and get on with it.†
Chpt 85-86
- Apparently the man had helped design the security parameters that kept the Depository Bank of Zurich a leader in the ultramodern world of electronic security.†
Chpt 87-88
- Vernet's credit card records showed a penchant for art books, expensive wine, and classical CD's—mostly Brahms—which he apparently enjoyed on an exceptionally high-end stereo system he had purchased several years ago.†
Chpt 87-88
- The only red flag tonight from Interpol had been a set of fingerprints that apparently belonged to Teabing's servant.†
Chpt 87-88
- Captain Fache had apparently requested the London police dispatcher alert him if Sophie called in.†
Chpt 87-88
- Langdon apparently had the same idea; he was gathering himself together and moving toward her now.†
Chpt 87-88
- Dozens of texts appeared, many of them referencing the eighteenth-century British writer Alexander Pope, whose counterreligious, mock-epic poetry apparently contained plenty of references to knights and London.†
Chpt 91-92
- We passed through metal detectors," Sophie reminded, apparently sensing Langdon's apprehension.†
Chpt 97-98
- The Temple Church was the perfect location to steal the keystone from Robert and Sophie, and its apparent relevance to the poem made it a plausible decoy.†
Chpt 99-100
- Apparently the word was out.†
Chpt 99-100
Definition:
-
(apparent) clear or obvious; or appearing as such but not necessarily so