Evident
late Middle English: from Old French, or from Latin evidens, evident- ‘obvious to the eye or mind’, from e- (variant of ex- ) ‘out’ + videre ‘to see’.
wiktionary
From Middle English[Term?], from Old French[Term?], from Latin ēvidēns(“visible, apparent, clear, plain”) (compare Late Latin ēvideor(“to appear plainly”)), from ē(“out”) + videō(“see”), present participle vidēns, deponent videor(“to appear, seem”). Displaced native Old English sweotol.
etymonline
evident (adj.)
"plainly seen or perceived, manifest, obvious," late 14c., from Old French evident and directly from Latin evidentem (nominative evidens) "perceptible, clear, obvious, apparent" from ex "out, out of, fully" (see ex-) + videntem (nominative videns), present participle of videre "to see" (from PIE root *weid- "to see").