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Envisage   /ɛnvˈɪzɪdʒ/   Listen
Envisage

verb
(past & past part. envisaged; pres. part. envisaging)
1.
Form a mental image of something that is not present or that is not the case.  Synonyms: conceive of, ideate, imagine.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Envisage" Quotes from Famous Books



... returned to enjoy close at hand this epoch-making evening. For now, he felt, there was nothing that could keep the Wilfred Balls back from those pinnacles of affluence which a combination of the more easily assimilated comic papers and articles on Self-Help had enabled him to envisage: Self-Help kind showing how a poor man might grow rich, and the comic papers how he might spend his money ...
— The Privet Hedge • J. E. Buckrose

... the substance, and the phenomenon the noumenon, but makes the substratum or noumenon (the object in itself) unknown and unknowable. The "phenomenon" of Kant was, however, something essentially different from the "quality" of Reid. In the philosophy of Kant, phenomenon means an object as we envisage or represent it to ourselves, in opposition to the noumenon, or a thing as it is in itself. The phenomenon is composed, in part, of subjective elements supplied by the mind itself; as regards intuition, the forms of space and time; as regards thought, the categories ...
— Christianity and Greek Philosophy • Benjamin Franklin Cocker

... future as ally. Looking steadfastly forward, they can forget. The Duke's future was openly in league with his past. For him, prospect was memory. All that there was for him of future was the death to which his honour was pledged. To envisage that was to... no, he would NOT envisage it! With a passionate effort he hypnotised himself to think of nothing at all. His brain, into which, by the power Zeus gave me, I was gazing, became a perfect vacuum, insulated by the will. It was the kind of experiment ...
— Zuleika Dobson - or, An Oxford Love Story • Max Beerbohm



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