imagination
N จินตนาการ การ วาดภาพ ใน ใจ creativity fantasy jin-ta-na-kan
IMAGINATION
n.[L. imaginatio.] The power or faculty of the mind by which it conceives and forms ideas of things communicated to it by the organs of sense. Imagination I understand to be the representation of an individual thought. Our simple apprehension of corporeal objects, if present, is sense; if absent, is imagination [conception. ] Imagination, in its proper sense, signifies a lively conception of objects of sight. It is distinguished from conception, as a part from a whole. The business of conception is to present us with an exact transcript of what we have felt or perceived. But we have also a power of modifying our conceptions, by combining the parts of different ones so as to form new wholes of our own creation. I shall employ the word imagination to express this power. I apprehend this to be the proper sense of the word, if imagination be the power which gives birth to the productions of the poet and the painter. We would define imagination to be the will working on the materials of memory; not satisfied with following the order prescribed by nature, or suggested by accident, it selects the parts of different conceptions, or objects of memory, to form a whole more pleasing, more terrible, or more awful, than has ever been presented in the ordinary course of nature. The two latter definitions give the true sense of the word, as now understood. 1. Conception; image in the mind; idea. Sometimes despair darkens all her imaginations. His imaginations were often as just as they were bold and strong. 2. Contrivance; scheme formed in the mind; device. Thou hast seen all their vengeance, and all their imaginations against me. Lamentations 3:6 . 3. Conceit; an unsolid or fanciful opinion. We are apt to think that space, in itself, is actually boundless; to which imagination, the idea of space of itself leads us. 4. First motion or purpose of the mind. Genesis 6:5.
Im *ag `i *na "tion, n. Etym: [OE. imaginacionum, F. imagination, fr. L.imaginatio. See Imagine. ]
IMAGINATIONAL
IMAGINATIONAL Im *ag `i *na "tion *al, a.
IMAGINATIONALISM
IMAGINATIONALISM Im *ag `i *na "tion *al *ism, n.
im ag i na tion |iˌmajəˈnāSHən ɪˌmæʤəˈneɪʃən | ▶noun the faculty or action of forming new ideas, or images or concepts of external objects not present to the senses: she'd never been blessed with a vivid imagination. • the ability of the mind to be creative or resourceful: technology gives workers the chance to use their imagination. • the part of the mind that imagines things: a girl who existed only in my imagination. ORIGIN Middle English: via Old French from Latin imaginatio (n- ), from the verb imaginari ‘picture to oneself, ’ from imago, imagin- ‘image. ’
im ¦agin |ation |ɪˌmadʒɪˈneɪʃ (ə )n | ▶noun the faculty or action of forming new ideas, or images or concepts of external objects not present to the senses: she'd never been blessed with a vivid imagination | her story captured the public's imagination. • [ mass noun ] the ability of the mind to be creative or resourceful: she was set in her ways and lacked imagination. • the part of the mind that imagines things: a girl who existed only in my imagination. ORIGIN Middle English: via Old French from Latin imaginatio (n- ), from the verb imaginari ‘picture to oneself ’, from imago, imagin- ‘image ’.
imagination noun 1 a vivid imagination: creative power, fancy, vision; informal mind's eye. 2 you need imagination in dealing with these problems: creativity, imaginativeness, creativeness; vision, inspiration, inventiveness, invention, resourcefulness, ingenuity; originality, innovation, innovativeness. 3 the album captured the public's imagination: interest, fascination, attention, passion, curiosity.
imagination noun 1 he had a very vivid imagination: imaginative faculty, creative power, fancy; informal mind's eye. 2 the government needs imagination in dealing with these problems: creativity, imaginativeness, creativeness; vision, inspiration, insight, inventiveness, invention, resourcefulness, initiative, ingenuity, enterprise; originality, innovation, innovativeness; individuality, unorthodoxy, nonconformity; cleverness, wit, quick-wittedness, genius, flair, panache; artistry, artistic power. 3 every once in a while an album captures the public's imagination: interest, fascination, attention, passion, curiosity, preoccupation.
Imagination
Ima gi na ti on Substantiv, feminin bildungssprachlich , die |Imaginati o n |die Imagination; Genitiv: der Imagination, Plural: die Imaginationen französisch imagination < lateinisch imaginatio Fantasie, Einbildungskraft, bildhaftes Denken das erfordert Imagination
imagination n. f. nom féminin 1 Faculté de se représenter un objet en esprit. : Cette personne n ’a aucune imagination. 2 Créativité. : Ces concepteurs de bandes dessinées ont une imagination fertile.
i mag i na tion /ɪmæ̀dʒɪnéɪʃ (ə )n /→imagine 名詞 複 ~s /-z /1 U 想像; 想像力 ; 構想力, 創造力 (!具体例ではan ~/~s; その際しばしば修飾語を伴う ) ▸ use [stretch ] one's imagination 想像力を働かせる [かきたてる ]▸ creative imagination 創造的想像力 ▸ Poets have a lot of imagination .詩人は想像力に富んでいる ▸ I'll leave the affair to your imagination .その件はご想像におまかせします 2 U 空想 ; 想像されたもの, 実在しないもの ▸ The problems are all in his imagination .その問題はすべて彼の想像が生んだものにすぎない 3 U 機転, 着想, 思いつき; (物事の )処理能力 .c à pture [c à tch ] A's imagin á tion 〈人 物が 〉A 〈人 〉をとりこにする .