-
121 kafasında canlandırmak
to envision, to envisage -
122 tasarlamak
"/ı/ 1. to envisage, envision; to plan; to project, devise a plan for. 2. to roughhew, rough out (a piece of wood or stone). tasarlayarak öldürme law premeditated murder. tasarlayarak öldürmek /ı/ law to murder, kill (someone) premeditatedly." -
123 öngörmek
/ı/ 1. to project, envisage, envision. 2. to keep (something) in mind. -
124 felidézi a képét vminek
to envision -
125 látomása van vmirõl
to envision -
126 lelki szemeivel lát vmit
to envision -
127 ini
see; synonyms (v) look, feel, discover, appreciate, behold, consider, deem, discern, distinguish, know, notice, recognize, apprehend, ascertain, catch, envision, find, hear, inspect, learn, regard, witness, get, read, attend, call, check, comprehend, ( adj) observe, perceive. -
128 môxe'eotsestôtse
picture; synonyms (n) photograph, effigy, paint, drawing, likeness, depiction, description, film, icon, illustration, landscape, painting, photo, portrait, scene, panorama, chart, delineation, (v) image, describe, draw, depict, fancy, imagine, copy, envision, figure, depicture, illustrate, delineate.
См. также в других словарях:
Envision — means to conceive or see something within one s mind; to imagine.Envision may also refer to:In business: * Envision EMI, LLC, a management company based in Virginia, USA * Envision Financial, a financial institution based in British Columbia,… … Wikipedia
envision — 1914, from EN (Cf. en ) (1) make, put in + VISION (Cf. vision). Related: Envisioned; envisioning. Earlier (1827) is envision d in sense endowed with vision … Etymology dictionary
envision — index conceive (comprehend), expect (consider probable), predict, presage Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
envision — ► VERB ▪ visualize; envisage … English terms dictionary
envision — [en vizh′ən, invizh′ən] vt. [ EN 1 + VISION] to imagine (something not yet in existence); picture in the mind … English World dictionary
envision — envisage, envision 1. Envisage is an early 19c loanword from French, meaning at first ‘to look in the face of’ and then (its current meaning) ‘to have a mental picture of (something yet to happen)’. Fowler (1926) dismissed it as an ‘undesirable… … Modern English usage
envision — (esp. AmE) verb ADVERB ▪ initially, originally ▪ The work took longer than initially envisioned. ▪ easily ▪ I can easily envision them working together. ▪ … Collocations dictionary
envision — en|vi|sion [ ın vıʒn ] verb transitive to imagine that something will happen in the future, or is happening now: That s a very different process from the one I envisioned. envision (someone) doing something: I can envision eighth graders having… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
envision — [[t]ɪnvɪ̱ʒ(ə)n[/t]] envisions, envisioning, envisioned VERB If you envision something, you envisage it. [AM; also BRIT, LITERARY] [V n] In the future we envision a federation of companies... [V that] Most people do stop at this point, not… … English dictionary
envision — UK [ɪnˈvɪʒ(ə)n] / US verb [transitive] Word forms envision : present tense I/you/we/they envision he/she/it envisions present participle envisioning past tense envisioned past participle envisioned American to envisage … English dictionary
envision — /en vizh euhn/, v.t. to picture mentally, esp. some future event or events: to envision a bright future. [1920 25; EN 1 + VISION] * * * … Universalium