-
1 vīsus
vīsus ūs, m [video], a looking, look, act of seeing, power of sight, vision: res visu foeda: obit truci omnia visu, i. e. looks fiercely on, V.: Mortalīs visūs reliquit, i. e. vanished, V: visūs effugiet tuos, O.—A thing seen, sight, appearance, apparition, vision: Rite secundarent visūs, V.: inopino territa visu, O.: nocturni visūs, L.—Appearance, seeming: visum quendam habere insignem: augustior humano visu, L. (al. humano habitu visūs).* * *look, sight, appearance; vision -
2 vīsiō
vīsiō ōnis, f [VID-], the act of seeing: hence, meton., an appearance, apparition, vision: adventicia: fluentes visiones.—Fig., a mental image, idea, conception, notion: speciem dei percipi cogitatione... eamque esse eius visionem, ut, etc.* * * -
3 vīsum
vīsum ī, n [P n. of video], a thing seen, sight, appearance, vision: visa somniorum: Dic visa quid ista ferant, O.—In the Academica of Cicero, for fantasi/a, an image produced by a sensation, representation.* * *vision; that which is seen, appearance, sight; visual/mental image -
4 visio
I.Lit.: ignes... nostrae visioni occurrunt, App. de Mundo, p. 63 fin.; id. M. 2, p. 120, 32; 8, p. 203, 37: in caelestis sponsi visione requiescere, Greg. Mag. Homil. 2, 2, 8; 2, 2, 12.—B.Transf., a thing seen, an appearance, apparition, a vision:II.adventicia,
Cic. Div. 2, 58, 120; cf. Macr. Somn. Scip. 1, 3.—Trop., an image of a thing in the mind; an idea, conception, notion:B.speciem dei percipi cogitatione... eamque esse ejus visionem, ut, etc.,
Cic. N. D. 1, 37, 105:veri falsique,
id. Ac. 2, 11, 33:falsa doloris,
id. Tusc. 2, 18, 42.—As a transl. of the Gr. phantasia, Quint. 6, 2, 29.—Transf., in jurid. lang., a supposition, a case:in propositā quaestione tribus visionibus relatis, etc.,
Dig. 5, 3, 25; so ib. 16, 1, 8; 17, 1, 29; 22, 3, 25 fin.; Tert. Anim. 9. -
5 visus
1.vīsus, a, um, Part. of video.2.vīsus, ūs, m. [video], a seeing, looking; a look, glance; the faculty or act of seeing, sight, vision.I.Lit.: feminas omnes visu nocere, quae duplices pupillas habent, Cic. Fragm. ap. Plin. 7, 2, 2, § 18:II.visu effascinare,
Plin. 7, 2, 2, § 16:oculorum visus,
Lucr. 5, 101;so quint. 1, 2, 11: corpus visu tactuque manifestum,
id. 1, 4, 20: visus in duas acies (divisus est), Lact. Opif. Dei, 10, 10; Ambros. in Luc. 7, 113 al.—In plur., Ov. F. 3, 406; Cael. Aur. Acut. 1, 15, 122; App. de Deo Socr. p. 43, 31.—Transf.A.The sight, the organ of sight:B.spectare inocciduis visibus,
with everwatchful eyes, Stat. Th. 6, 277.—Object., a thing seen, a sight, appearance, an apparition, a vision:C.conspectus ab utrāque acie aliquanto augustior humano visu,
Liv. 8, 9, 10:rite secundarent visus,
Verg. A. 3, 36:inopino territa visu,
Ov. M. 4, 232:nocturni visus,
Liv. 8, 6, 11.—Appearance, seeming, probability:multa esse probabilia, quae quamquam non perciperentur, tamen, quia visum haberent quendam insignem et illustrem, iis sapientis vita regeretur,
Cic. N. D. 1, 5, 12. -
6 aciēs
aciēs ēī (old form ē; acc. aciem, disyl. V.; plur. only nom. and acc.), f [2 AC-], a sharp edge, point, cutting part: securium: falcis, V.—Fig.: horum auctoritatis, the edge, i. e. efficiency. — Meton., of sight, sharpness of vision, keen look: aciem oculorum ferre, Cs.: fugere aciem: cum stupet acies fulgoribus, the sight, H. — Brilliancy, brightness: neque tum stellis acies obtunsa videtur, V. — Concr., the pupil of the eye: acies ipsa, quā cernimus.—Poet., the eye: huc geminas nunc flecte acies, V.: huc atque huc acies circumtulit, V.—In war, the front of an army, line of battle, battle-array: triplex, i. e. the legion in three ranks, Cs.: duplex, Cs.: mediā acie, Cs.: exercitūs nostri: aciem instruere, Cs.: extra aciem procurrere, Cs.: neque in acie, sed alio more bellum gerendum, S. — Of a line of ships: productā longius acie (navium), Cs.—The battle-array, an army in order of battle: hostium acies cernebatur, Cs.: unius corporis duae acies dimicantes, two divisions of an army: prima, the van, L.: tertia, Cs.: novissima the rear, L. — Of cavalry: equitum acies, L. — Poet.: Volcania, a line of fire, V.—A battle, engagement: in acie Pharsalicā: in acie vincere, Cs. —Fig., of mind, acuteness, sharpness, force, power: mentis: animi.—A verbal contest, disputation, discussion, debate: in aciem prodire.* * *sharpness, sharp edge, point; battle line/array; sight, glance; pupil of eye -
7 cālīgō
cālīgō inis, f [2 CAL-], a thick air, mist, vapor, fog: picea, V.: atra, V.: noctem eadem caligo obtinuit (i. e. nebula), L.: Boreas caligine tectus, i. e. dust and clouds, O.—Meton., darkness. obscurity, gloom: cum altitudo caliginem oculis obfudisset, i. e. had caused dizziness, L.: in tantā caligine, L.: obscura: caeca, V.: inter caliginis umbras, O.: caligo ac tenebrae, Cu.: quod videbam... quasi per caliginem.—Mental darkness, confusion, ignorance: illa, quam dixi: caecā mentem caligine consitus, Ct. — Calamity, affliction, gloom: caligo bonorum, tenebrae rei p.* * *Icaligare, caligavi, caligatus Vbe dark/gloomy/misty/cloudy; have bad vision; cloud; be blinded; be/make dizzyIImist/fog; darkness/gloom/murkiness; moral/intellectual/mental dark; dizziness -
8 cālīgō
cālīgō —, —, āre [1 caligo], to steam, reek, darken: caligans (Centaurus): (nubes) umida circum Caligat, V.—Meton., to be dark, gloomy: caligans nigrā formidine lucus, V.: altae caligantesque fenestrae, dizzy, Iu.* * *Icaligare, caligavi, caligatus Vbe dark/gloomy/misty/cloudy; have bad vision; cloud; be blinded; be/make dizzyIImist/fog; darkness/gloom/murkiness; moral/intellectual/mental dark; dizziness -
9 cōnspectus
cōnspectus ūs, m [com- + SPEC-], a seeing, look, sight, view, range of sight, power of vision: casurusne in conspectum animus: quo longissime conspectum oculi ferebant, L.: conspectu urbis frui: Dari mi in conspectum, T.: paene in conspectu exercitūs, before the eyes, Cs.: conspectu in medio constitit, before all eyes, V.: illam e conspectu amisi meo, T.: in conspectum venire, N.: ex hominum conspectu morte decedere, N.: (mons) in conspectu omnium excelsissimus, Cs.: conspectum fugit, notice, O.—Presence, proximity, countenance, sight: scio fore meum conspectum invisum, T.: huic vestrum conspectum eripere, banish from: missis in conspectu cecidere lapides, L.: frequens vester, i. e. your assembled presence: procul a conspectu imperii: velut e conspectu tolli, Ta. — Appearance: animi partes, quarum est conspectus inlustrior: conspectu suo proelium restituit, L.— Fig., a mental view, glance, survey, consideration, contemplation: in conspectu animi: ut ea ne in conspectu quidem relinquantur: me a conspectu malorum avertere, L.* * *Iconspecta -um, conspectior -or -us, conspectissimus -a -um ADJvisible, open to view; remarkable/striking/eminent/distinguished; conspicuousIIview, (range of) sight; aspect/appearance/look; perception/contemplation/survey -
10 imāgō
imāgō inis, f [2 IC-], an imitation, copy, image, representation, likeness, statue, bust, picture: tabularum, exact copy: cereae, H.: macra, Iu.: genetiva, natural figure, O.: sine imagine tellus, shapeless, O.—An ancestral image, mask (of a man who had been aedile, praetor, or consul): ius imaginis: avi tui: clarum hac fore imagine, i. e. would become an aristocrat, L.: fumosae, smoky ancestral images: nullae sunt imagines, quae, etc., ancestors of distinction: imagines non habeo, S.: imagines familiae suae: homo multarum imaginum, S.: funus imagines ducant triumphales tuum, H.—A phantom, ghost, apparition, vision: magna mei sub terras ibit imago, shade, V.: vana, H.: inhumani coniugis, V.: natum falsis Ludis imaginibus, phantoms, V.: mortis, O.: somni, a dream, O.: nocturnae, Tb.—A reverberation, echo: resonare tamquam imago: vocis offensa resultat imago, V.: iocosa montis, H.—Fig., an image, conception, thought, imagination, idea: Scipionis imaginem sibi proponere: antiquitatis, an image of the olden time: proconsularem imaginem tam saevam facere (i. e. by cruelty in office), L.: tantae pietatis, V.: poenaeque in imagine tota est, O. —A figure of speech, similitude, comparison, C.: haec a te non multum abludit imago, H.—An empty form, image, semblance, appearance, shadow: adumbrata gloriae: equitis Romani: rei p.: his imaginibus iuris spretis, L.—A reminder, suggestion: quorum (temporum) imaginem video in rebus tuis: genitoris imagine capta, V.* * *likeness, image, appearance; statue; idea; echo; ghost, phantom -
11 īnsomnium
īnsomnium ī, n [1 in+somnus], a dream. —Sing., Ta.—Plur., T., V., Tb.* * *wakefulness; vision, dream -
12 īnsomnium
īnsomnium ī, n [2 in+somnus], sleeplessness.—Only plur: insomnia portare ocellis, Pr.* * *wakefulness; vision, dream -
13 ob-eō
ob-eō īvī, itus, īre, to go, go to meet, go in opposition: infera in loca: ad omnīs hostium conatūs, L.—Of heavenly bodies, to go down, set: obit Lepus.—To fall, perish, die: tecum libens, H.: simul se cum illis obituros, L.—To go to, visit, betake oneself to: quantum (urbis) flamma obire non potuisset, reach: obeundus Marsya, qui, etc., H.—To travel over, wander through, traverse, visit: tantum telluris, V.: tantas regiones pedibus: cenas.—Of vision or speech, to run over, survey, review, recount: omnia per se, oversee in person, Cs.: omnia visu, V.: omnīs oratione meā civitates, enumerate.—To go over, surround, overspread, envelop: obeuntia terras maria, V.: chlamydem limbus obibat Aureus, O.: ora Pallor obit, O.—To address oneself to, engage in, enter upon, undertake, execute, accomplish: hereditatum obeundarum causā, entering upon: pugnas, V.: iudicia: ad consularia munera obeunda, L.: tot simul bella, L.—To meet: vadimonium, appear at the appointed time: diem edicti, appear on the day: annum petitionis tuae, i. e. be a candidate the first year the law permits: diem suum obire, die: diem supremum, N.: mortem, T.: morte obitā, after death. -
14 per-currō
per-currō percucurrī or percurrī, cursus, ere, to run, run along, run all the way, run through, hasten through, traverse, run over, pass over: curriculo percurre (ad villam), run quickly, T.: per temonem (currūs), along the pole, Cs.: agrum Picenum, Cs.: aristas, speed over, O.: pectine telas, V.: rima percurrit lumine nimbos, V.—Fig., of speech, to run over, go through, treat in succession: per omnīs civitates percurrit mea oratio: partes, quas modo percucurri: multas res oratione: Percurram quot villas possideat, Iu.—Of thought or vision, to run over, scan briefly, look over: id brevi: oculo, H.: paginas in annalibus magistratuum, look over, L.—Of feeling, to run through, penetrate: pectora metu percurrente, Cu. -
15 perspicāx
perspicāx ācis, adj. [per+SPEC-], sharpsighted, penetrating, acute, perspicacious: prudentia: homo, T.: ad has res, T.: alqd naturā.* * *perspicacis (gen.), perspicacior -or -us, perspicacissimus -a -um ADJobservant, attentive to what is going on; having keen/penetrating sight/vision -
16 somnium
somnium ī, n [somnus], a dream: rex somnio perculsus, Enn. ap. C.: interpretes somniorum: quae somnio visa fuerant, L.—Person.: Somnia, Dreams (as divinities): Somnia, veros narrantia casūs, O.—Poet.: Somnus, tibi somnia tristia portans, i. e. the sleep of death, V.— A dream, whim, fancy, stuff, nonsense: de argento, somnium, T.: delirantium somnia: somnia Pythagorea, H.* * *dream, vision; fantasy, day-dream -
17 speciēs
speciēs —, acc. em, abl. ē, f [SPEC-], a sight, look, view, appearance, aspect, mien: quae sensūs nostros specie primā acerrime commovent: doloris speciem ferre: navium, Cs.: hominum honestissima: ad speciem magnifico ornatu, as to outward appearance: speciem habere honesti, the look of what is right: turba maiorem quam pro numero speciem ferens, Cu.— A spectacle, sight, appearance: ponite ante oculos miseram illam speciem. —Fig., a mental appearance, idea, notion: insidebat in eius mente species eloquentiae: viri boni: Qui species alias veris scelerisque capiet, H.: inanīs species anxio animo figurare, Cu.— A look, show, seeming, appearance, semblance, pretence, cloak, color, pretext: formae, quae reapse nullae sunt, speciem autem offerunt: cuius rei species erat acceptio frumenti, S.: aliquam fraudi speciem iuris imponere, L.: similitudinem quandam gerebant speciemque sapientium: per speciem celebrandarum cantu epularum, L.: haud dubio in speciem consensu fit ad Poenos deditio, as a pretence, L.: ad speciem tabernaculis relictis, Cs.— A resemblance, likeness ; only in the phrase, in speciem, after the manner, in the fashion, like: Inque chori ludunt speciem, O.: In montis speciem curvari, O.— Show, ornament, display, splendor, beauty: species eius (virtutis) et pulchritudo: praebere speciem triumpho, L.: Ducit te species, H.: speciem Saturnia vaccae probat, O.: corporis, Cu.— An appearance in sleep, vision, apparition: repetit quietis Ipsa suae speciem, O.: in quiete utrique consuli eadem dicitur visa species viri, etc., L.— A likeness, image, statue: ex aere vetus, Enn. ap. C.— Reputation, honor: populi R.— A particular sort, kind, quality, species: (opp. genus).* * *sight, appearance, show; splendor, beauty; kind, type -
18 vīsus
-
19 adspectus
appearance, aspect, mien; act of looking; sight, vision; glance, view; horizon -
20 aspectus
appearance, aspect, mien; act of looking; sight, vision; glance, view; horizon
См. также в других словарях:
Vision — Vision … Deutsch Wörterbuch
VISION — «Toute la conduite de notre vie dépend de nos sens, entre lesquels celui de la vue étant le plus universel et le plus noble. Il n’y a point de doute que les inventions qui servent à augmenter sa puissance ne soient des plus utiles qui puissent… … Encyclopédie Universelle
Vision — most often refers to visual perception, but may refer to vision (spirituality) (i.e., inspirational experiences or perceptions believed to come from a deity or other supernatural source) or hallucinations.In business, a vision refers to the… … Wikipedia
Vision — Vi sion, n. [OE. visioun, F. vision, fr. L. visio, from videre, visum, to see: akin to Gr. ? to see, ? I know, and E. wit. See {Wit}, v., and cf. {Advice}, {Clairvoyant}, {Envy}, {Evident}, {Provide}, {Revise}, {Survey}, {View}, {Visage}, {Visit} … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Vision On — fue un programa de televisión inglés producido y transmitido por la BBC1 desde 1964 hasta 1977. Estuvo enfocado a los niños con sordera y problemas visuales. Concebido por Ursula Eason y Patrick Dowling, puso énfasis en la comunicación e… … Wikipedia Español
Vision On — was a British children s television programme, shown on BBC1 from 1964 to 1977 specifically for deaf children. It was conceived by BBC Producers Ursula Eason and developed by Patrick Dowling to replace a monthly series For The Deaf , a programme… … Wikipedia
Vision — (lat. visio, „Anblick, Erscheinung“) steht für: Vision (Religion), eine religiöse Erscheinung Vision (Thomas Mann), ein Text von Thomas Mann den Spielfilm Vision – Aus dem Leben der Hildegard von Bingen (2009) im weiteren Sinn für eine… … Deutsch Wikipedia
vision — Vision. s. f. v. Action de la faculté de voir. De quelle maniere, & en quelle partie de l oeil se fait la vision. La vision beatifique, en termes de Theologie, C est l action par laquelle les bien heureux voyent Dieu. Il sign. aussi, Les choses… … Dictionnaire de l'Académie française
Vision 20/20 — (20/20 Vision) est le quatre vingt treizième épisode de la série télévisée La Cinquième Dimension, diffusé le 10 décembre 1988 aux États Unis. Synopsis Après avoir cassé ses lunettes, un homme arrive à voir l avenir. Il décide de se… … Wikipédia en Français
vision — UK US /ˈvɪʒən/ noun ► [C or U] the ability to imagine how something could develop in the future, or the ideas that come from imagining in this way: »There s a lack of leadership, a lack of vision, and a lack of organization in the industry as a… … Financial and business terms
visión — f. fisiol. Capacidad que permite recibir e interpretar las ondas lumínicas comprendidas entre los 400 y 800 nanómetros. Los principales órganos que intervienen en el proceso son el ojo, el nervio óptico y el cerebro. En el hombre, la visión es… … Diccionario médico