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picture to oneself

См. также в других словарях:

  • put oneself across — verb To explain ones ideas and opinions clearly so that another person can understand them and get a picture of your personality. It is very important to put yourself across well at a job interview …   Wiktionary

  • thinking to oneself —  as in I thought to myself: ‘We’re lost,’ is always tautological; there is no one else to whom one can think. Delete to myself. Similarly vacuous is in my mind in constructions like I could picture in my mind where the offices had been …   Bryson’s dictionary for writers and editors

  • thinking to oneself —     Somehow he must have thought to himself that this unfamiliar line needed to be ascribed to someone rather more venerable (Sunday Telegraph) , Can it be that the Sunday Times Magazine is paying no attention to my book? Frank Delaney was… …   Dictionary of troublesome word

  • Representational systems (NLP) — NLP TOPICS   …   Wikipedia

  • fancy — /ˈfænsi / (say fansee) noun (plural fancies) 1. imagination, especially as exercised in a capricious or desultory manner. 2. the faculty of creating illustrative or decorative imagery, as in poetical or literary composition, sometimes seen as… …  

  • fancy — n., adj., & v. n. (pl. ies) 1 an individual taste or inclination (take a fancy to). 2 a caprice or whim. 3 a thing favoured, e.g. a horse to win a race. 4 an arbitrary supposition. 5 a the faculty of using imagination or of inventing imagery. b a …   Useful english dictionary

  • feature — n 1. features face, countenance, visage, physiognomy, Sl. mug, Sl. kisser, Sl. puss; looks, lineaments. 2.(all of the face) cast, form, turn, shape, figure, configuration, Inf. cut of one s jib; appearance, expression, look, lineament, aspect;… …   A Note on the Style of the synonym finder

  • envision — transitive verb Date: 1855 to picture to oneself < envisions a career dedicated to promoting peace > Synonyms: see think …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • fancy — fanciness, n. /fan see/, n., pl. fancies, adj., fancier, fanciest, v., fancied, fancying, interj. n. 1. imagination or fantasy, esp. as exercised in a capricious manner. 2. the artistic ability of creating unreal or whimsical imagery, decorative… …   Universalium

  • image — [13] Latin imāgō meant a ‘likeness of something’ (it probably came from the same source as imitate). It subsequently developed a range of secondary senses, such as ‘echo’ and ‘ghost’, which have not survived the journey via Old French into… …   The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • fantastic — late 14c., existing only in imagination, from M.Fr. fantastique (14c.), from M.L. fantasticus, from L.L. phantasticus imaginary, from Gk. phantastikos able to imagine, from phantazein make visible (middle voice phantazesthai picture to oneself ); …   Etymology dictionary

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