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imagination

  • 1 imagination

    1) ((the part of the mind which has) the ability to form mental pictures: I can see it all in my imagination.) představivost
    2) (the creative ability of a writer etc: This book shows a lot of imagination.) obrazotvornost, fantazie
    3) (the seeing etc of things which do not exist: There was no-one there - it was just your imagination.) výplod obrazotvornosti
    * * *
    • představivost
    • obrazotvornost
    • fantazie

    English-Czech dictionary > imagination

  • 2 capture the imagination

    • probudit fantazii

    English-Czech dictionary > capture the imagination

  • 3 a figment of the/one's imagination

    (something one has imagined and which has no reality.) smyšlenka, výmysl

    English-Czech dictionary > a figment of the/one's imagination

  • 4 vivid

    ['vivid]
    1) ((of colours etc) brilliant; very bright: The door was painted a vivid yellow; The trees were vivid in their autumn colours.) svítivý
    2) (clear; striking: I have many vivid memories of that holiday; a vivid image/description.) živý; působivý
    3) ((of the imagination) active; lively: She has a vivid imagination.) bujný
    - vividness
    * * *
    • živý
    • pronikavý
    • svěží
    • intenzivní
    • jasný
    • čilý

    English-Czech dictionary > vivid

  • 5 capture

    [- ə]
    1) (to take by force, skill etc: The soldiers captured the castle; Several animals were captured.) dopadnout; zajmout; chytit
    2) (to take possession of (a person's attention etc): The story captured his imagination.) upoutat, zaujmout
    * * *
    • ukořistit
    • zachytit
    • zaujmout
    • zajmout
    • ovládnout
    • kořist
    • dobytí
    • dopadnout

    English-Czech dictionary > capture

  • 6 creative

    [-tiv]
    adjective (having or showing the power and imagination to create: a creative dress-designer.) kreativní, tvořivý
    * * *
    • tvůrčí
    • tvořivý

    English-Czech dictionary > creative

  • 7 fertile

    1) (producing a lot: fertile fields; a fertile mind/imagination.) úrodný; vynalézavý
    2) (able to produce fruit, children, young animals etc: fertile seed.) plodný
    - fertilize
    - fertilise
    - fertilization
    - fertilisation
    - fertilizer
    - fertiliser
    * * *
    • úrodný
    • výnosný

    English-Czech dictionary > fertile

  • 8 figment

    ['fiɡmənt]
    * * *
    • výtvor
    • výplod
    • výmysl
    • smyšlenka

    English-Czech dictionary > figment

  • 9 fire

    1. noun
    1) (anything that is burning, whether accidentally or not: a warm fire in the kitchen; Several houses were destroyed in a fire.) oheň; požár
    2) (an apparatus for heating: a gas fire; an electric fire.) topení, kamna
    3) (the heat and light produced by burning: Fire is one of man's greatest benefits.) oheň
    4) (enthusiasm: with fire in his heart.) nadšení
    5) (attack by gunfire: The soldiers were under fire.) palba
    2. verb
    1) ((of china, pottery etc) to heat in an oven, or kiln, in order to harden and strengthen: The ceramic pots must be fired.) vypalovat
    2) (to make (someone) enthusiastic; to inspire: The story fired his imagination.) nadchnout; rozpálit
    3) (to operate (a gun etc) by discharging a bullet etc from it: He fired his revolver three times.) spustit
    4) (to send out or discharge (a bullet etc) from a gun etc: He fired three bullets at the target.) vypálit
    5) ((often with at or on) to aim and operate a gun at; to shoot at: They suddenly fired on us; She fired at the target.) střílet
    6) (to send away someone from his/her job; to dismiss: He was fired from his last job for being late.) vyhodit
    - firearm
    - fire-brigade
    - fire-cracker
    - fire-engine
    - fire-escape
    - fire-extinguisher
    - fire-guard
    - fireman
    - fireplace
    - fireproof
    - fireside
    - fire-station
    - firewood
    - firework
    - firing-squad
    - catch fire
    - on fire
    - open fire
    - play with fire
    - set fire to something / set something on fire
    - set fire to / set something on fire
    - set fire to something / set on fire
    - set fire to / set on fire
    - under fire
    * * *
    • topení
    • topit
    • požární
    • požár
    • oheň
    • palba
    • ohniště
    • krb

    English-Czech dictionary > fire

  • 10 imaginary

    adjective (existing only in the mind or imagination; not real: Her illnesses are usually imaginary.) domnělý
    * * *
    • imaginární

    English-Czech dictionary > imaginary

  • 11 imaginative

    [-nətiv, ]( American[) -neitiv]
    adjective ((negative unimaginative) having, or created with, imagination: an imaginative writer; This essay is interesting and imaginative.) nápaditý, vynalézavý
    * * *
    • vynalézavý
    • nápaditý

    English-Czech dictionary > imaginative

  • 12 imagine

    [i'mæ‹in]
    1) (to form a mental picture of (something): I can imagine how you felt.) představit si
    2) (to see or hear etc (something which is not true or does not exist): Children often imagine that there are frightening animals under their beds; You're just imagining things!) vidět ve své fantazii
    3) (to think; to suppose: I imagine (that) he will be late.) domnívat se; předpokládat
    - imagination
    - imaginative
    * * *
    • pomyslet si
    • pomyslit si
    • představovat
    • představit si
    • stavit si
    • snít

    English-Czech dictionary > imagine

  • 13 morbid

    ['mo:(r)bid]
    (sick (in the way one shows his/her excessive interest in death, disease, cruel acts etc): his morbid fascination with horror films; her morbid imagination.) morbidní
    * * *
    • morbidní

    English-Czech dictionary > morbid

  • 14 scope

    [skəup]
    1) ((often with for) the opportunity or chance to do, use or develop: There's no scope for originality in this job.) možnost
    2) (the area or extent of an activity etc: Few things are beyond the scope of a child's imagination.) sféra
    * * *
    • volnost
    • prostor
    • rozsah
    • dráha
    • cíl

    English-Czech dictionary > scope

  • 15 vision

    ['viʒən]
    1) (something seen in the imagination or in a dream: God appeared to him in a vision.) vidění
    2) (the ability to see or plan into the future: Politicians should be men of vision.) předvídavost
    3) (the ability to see or the sense of sight: He is slowly losing his vision.) zrak
    * * *
    • vidění
    • vize
    • zrak
    • představa

    English-Czech dictionary > vision

  • 16 a touch

    (a small quantity or degree: The soup needs a touch of salt; a touch of imagination.) trocha

    English-Czech dictionary > a touch

  • 17 in one's mind's eye

    (in one's imagination: If you try hard, you can see the room in your mind's eye.) v duchu

    English-Czech dictionary > in one's mind's eye

См. также в других словарях:

  • imagination — [ imaʒinasjɔ̃ ] n. f. • XIIe; lat. imaginatio I ♦ L IMAGINATION. 1 ♦ Faculté que possède l esprit de se représenter des images; connaissances, expérience sensible. Le domaine des idées et celui de l imagination. Cela a frappé son imagination. 2 ♦ …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Imagination! — (formerly The Journey Into Imagination pavilion) is the name of a pavilion that sits on the western side of Future World , one of two themed areas of Epcot, a theme park at the Walt Disney World Resort in Lake Buena Vista, Florida USA. It holds… …   Wikipedia

  • Imagination — (>lat.: imago „Bild“) ist synonym mit Einbildung, Einbildungskraft, Phantasie, bildhaft anschaulichem Vorstellen.[1] Es wird darunter die psychologische Fähigkeit verstanden, sich nicht gegenwärtige Situationen, Vorgänge, Gegenstände und… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Imagination — Im*ag i*na tion, n. [OE. imaginacionum, F. imagination, fr. L. imaginatio. See {Imagine}.] 1. The imagine making power of the mind; the power to create or reproduce ideally an object of sense previously perceived; the power to call up mental… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • imagination — Imagination. s. f. v. La faculté de l ame qui imagine. Il a l imagination vive, l imagination forte, l imagination grande, l imagination fertile, l imagination gastée. la force de l imagination. voyez ce que peut l imagination. un effet de l… …   Dictionnaire de l'Académie française

  • IMAGINATION — IMAGINATION, the power of the soul which retains images derived from sense perception, or which combines such images or their parts into new composite images, which took on a special meaning in philosophy. To Aristotle (De Anima, 3), the term… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • imagination — imagination, fancy, fantasy are comparable when denoting either the power or the function of the mind by which mental images of things are formed or the exercise of that power especially as manifested in poetry or other works of art. The meanings …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • Imagination — • The faculty of representing to oneself sensible objects independently of an actual impression of those objects on our senses Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Imagination     Imagination …   Catholic encyclopedia

  • imagination — Imagination, Imaginatio. Imagination rude, qui n est pas du tout façonnée, Informatio. L imagination et fantasie du peuple, Populi sensus. B. ex Cic …   Thresor de la langue françoyse

  • imagination — IMAGINATION: Toujours vive. S en défier. Quand on n en a pas, la dénigrer chez les autres. Pour écrire des romans, il suffit d avoir de l imagination …   Dictionnaire des idées reçues

  • imagination — (n.) faculty of the mind which forms and manipulates images, mid 14c., ymaginacion, from O.Fr. imaginacion concept, mental picture; hallucination, from L. imaginationem (nom. imaginatio) imagination, a fancy, noun of action from pp. stem of… …   Etymology dictionary

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