vi·sion (v zh n)n.1. a. The faculty of sight; eyesight: poor vision. b. Something that is or has been seen. 2. Unusual competence in discernment or perception; intelligent foresight: a leader of vision. 3. The manner in which one sees or conceives of something. 4. A mental image produced by the imagination. 5. The mystical experience of seeing as if with the eyes the supernatural or a supernatural being. 6. A person or thing of extraordinary beauty. tr.v. vi·sioned, vi·sion·ing, vi·sions To see in or as if in a vision; envision.
[Middle English, from Old French, from Latin v si , v si n-, from v sus, past participle of vid re, to see; see weid- in Indo-European roots.]
vi sion·al adj. vi sion·al·ly adv. |
vision Noun 1. the ability to see 2. a vivid mental image produced by the imagination: I kept having visions of him being tortured 3. a hallucination caused by divine inspiration, madness, or drugs: visions of God 4. great perception of future developments: what he had instead of charisma was vision 5. the image on a television screen 6. a person or thing of extraordinary beauty [Latin visio sight, from videre to see]
ThesaurusLegend: Synonyms Related Words Antonyms | Noun | 1. | vision - a vivid mental image; "he had a vision of his own death"prevision - a prophetic vision (as in a dream) | | 2. | vision - the ability to see; the visual facultyexteroception - sensitivity to stimuli originating outside of the body central vision - vision using the fovea and parafovea; the middle part of the visual field distance vision - vision for objects that a 20 feet or more from the viewer near vision - vision for objects 2 feet or closer to the viewer peripheral vision - vision at the edges of the visual field using only the periphery of the retina | | 3. | vision - the perceptual experience of seeing; "the runners emerged from the trees into his clear vision"; "he had a visual sensation of intense light" | | 4. | vision - the formation of a mental image of something that is not perceived as real and is not present to the senses; "popular imagination created a world of demons"; "imagination reveals what the world could be"fancy - a kind of imagination that was held by Coleridge to be more casual and superficial than true imagination fantasy, phantasy - imagination unrestricted by reality; "a schoolgirl fantasy" dreaming, dream - imaginative thoughts indulged in while awake; "he lives in a dream that has nothing to do with reality" | | 5. | vision - a religious or mystical experience of a supernatural appearance; "he had a vision of the Virgin Mary"experience - an event as apprehended; "a surprising experience"; "that painful experience certainly got our attention" |
vision noun 1. image, idea, dream, plans, hopes, prospect, ideal, concept, fancy, fantasy, conception, delusion, daydream, reverie, flight of fancy, mental picture, pipe dream, imago Psychoanalysis castle in the air, fanciful notion noun 2. hallucination, illusion, apparition, revelation, ghost, phantom, delusion, spectre, mirage, wraith, chimera, phantasm, eidolon noun 4. foresight, imagination, perception, insight, awareness, inspiration, innovation, creativity, intuition, penetration, inventiveness, shrewdness, discernment, prescience, perceptiveness, farsightedness, breadth of view noun 5. picture, dream, sight, delight, beauty, joy, sensation, spectacle, knockout ( informal) beautiful sight, perfect picture, feast for the eyes, sight for sore eyes, pearler Austral. ( slang) beaut Austral., N.Z. ( slang)
Translations vision [ˈvɪʒən] n (= sight) → vista (= foresight), ( in dream) → visión f
vision [ˈvɪʒən] n (= sight) → vue f, vision f (= foresight), ( in dream) → vision
vision [ˈvɪʒən] n ( sight) → Sicht f;
vision [ˈvɪʒən] n (= sight) → vista (= foresight), ( in dream) → visione f
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