imagination

imagination
i|ma|gi|na|tion
W3S3 [ıˌmædʒıˈneıʃən] n
1.) [U and C]
the ability to form pictures or ideas in your mind
You don't have to use your imagination when you're watching television.
Children often have very vivid imaginations .
There is a lack of imagination in the way the furniture is displayed.
It does not take much imagination to understand the depth of their grief.
These ancient objects must have fired his imagination .
With a little imagination , you can find great inexpensive Christmas gifts.
2.) be (a figment of) sb's imagination
to be something that someone imagines, not something that really exists or happens
Did you hear that noise, or was it my imagination?
These people do exist; they're not figments of my imagination.
3.) in sb's imagination
only existing or happening in someone's mind, not in real life
For the refugees, home exists only in their imagination.
4.) capture/catch sb's imagination
to make people feel very interested and excited
American football really captured the imagination of the British public.
5.) leave sth to sb's imagination
to deliberately not describe something because you think someone can guess or imagine it
Mercifully, the writer leaves most of the physical horrors to our imagination.
6.) leave little/nothing to the imagination
a) if someone's clothes leave little or nothing to the imagination, the clothes are very thin or are worn in a way that shows the person's body
Her black satin dress left nothing to the imagination.
b) if something sexual or violent is described in a way that leaves nothing to the imagination, it is described in too much detail
7.) use your imagination
spoken used to tell someone that they can easily guess the answer to a question, so you should not need to tell them
not by any stretch of the imagination atstretch2 (4)
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COLLOCATES for sense 1
use your imagination
vivid/fertile/creative imagination (=when you have many pictures and ideas in your mind)
overactive imagination (=when you imagine things that are very unlikely)
lack of imagination
something takes imagination
stretch somebody's/the imagination (=make someone imagine something very unlikely)
fire somebody's imagination (=make someone eager to use their imagination)
with a little imagination
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Dictionary of contemporary English. 2013.

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  • 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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