Imaginaria in english

Imaginary

pronunciation: ɪmædʒəneri part of speech: adjective
In gestures

imaginar = envision ; guess ; imagine ; visualise [visualize, -USA] ; dream ; confabulate. 

Example: Let me further specify the requirements of the catalog envisioned by the Paris Principles.Example: Do not use your first name, last name, or initials as a password, since this information is easily guessed by an unauthorized person.Example: I do not imagine, as a result, that public libraries will, for instance, begin establishing inappropriate and complex transliterated forms of names.Example: Coates believed that in order to conceptualise an action it is necessary to visualise the thing on which the action is being performed.Example: This has brought us nearer to UBC than anyone would have dreamed possible thirty years ago.Example: His cognitive abilities were severely compromised, and he confabulated continuously and bizarrely.

more:

» hacer imaginarconjure up + a vision ofconjure up + an image ofbring + a picture of .

Example: The scythe, to me, conjures up a vision of warm summer days and lingering sunsets, straw hats, sackcloth and shire horses.

Example: If one were to think of an analogue outside the library situation, one would conjure up the image of a miser cackling with delight as he counts and recounts his beloved coins.

Example: The name brings a picture of colorful wagons being drawn by pied horses.

» imaginarsepicturehave + an idea ofget + an idea ofdream up .

Example: One can now picture a future investigator in his laboratory, his hands are free, he is not anchored.

Example: I really didn't even have an idea of how difficult it was going to be.

Example: To read a writer is for me not merely to get an idea of what he says, but to go off with him and travel in his company.

Example: Scientists have created a liquid goo that turns into a rubbery solid when shaken and they are inviting the public to help dream up uses for it.

» imaginarse una situaciónenvision + a situation .

Example: I cannot evision a situation in which NIH would seek to suppress a rebuttal article.

» que jamás hubiera podido imaginarsebeyond + Posesivo + wildest dreams .

Example: Her search for the truth led her into danger and passion beyond her wildest dreams.

» que nunca hubiera podido imaginarsebeyond + Posesivo + wildest dreams .

Example: Her search for the truth led her into danger and passion beyond her wildest dreams.

» ya + Pronombre + lo imaginabaPronombre + thought as much .

Example: Sakura realised she must have sounded like an idiot and Ino's expression showed she thought as much too.

» ya + Pronombre + lo + imaginarPronombre + guess + as much .

Example: She said she guessed as much and she half expected it actually.

imaginario = imaginary ; imagined ; fictitious ; fictionalised [fictionalized, -USA] ; fictional ; hallucinatory ; make-believe ; fictious ; fantastic ; fantastical. 

Example: Like Theseus in the Labyrinth we need to be able to follow well trodden pathways through hypermedia materials and re-track our journey along an imaginary thread when we get lost.Example: In recent years, then, there has been much less scaremongering about the imagined horrors of drowning in a sea of paper.Example: Certainly there are very serious novels which, by means of a fictitious story, have a great deal to say about human relationships and social structures.Example: This is a humourous and cautionary fictionalised account of a disastrous author visit to a public library to do a reading for children.Example: No one, in this purely hypothetical example, has thought that the reader might be happy with a factual account of an Atlantic convoy as well as, or in place of, a purely fictional account.Example: Subject-matter, portrayed with hallucinatory realism, is largely autobiographical -- mainly people connected with the artist and places associated with them.Example: This book illustrates and describes the features of a monster and reinsures the children not to be frightened of make-believe monsters.Example: Many of them are fictious, but there are also real artists and scientists, who play parts in the book, in one way or another.Example: He builds up a picture of human anguish in the face of the mysteries of existence that is both dreamlike and concrete, fantastic and real at the same time.Example: Filled with allegory and allusion, his paintings portray a fantastical universe inhabited by mysterious and fanciful creatures.

more:

» pasado imaginarioimaginary past .

Example: Besotted with an imaginary past that never was, the Department of National Heritage has proved unable to provide the national lead that was expected.

Imaginaria synonyms

notional in spanish: hipotético, pronunciation: noʊʃənəl part of speech: adjective fanciful in spanish: imaginario, pronunciation: fænsɪfəl part of speech: adjective unreal in spanish: irreal, pronunciation: ənril part of speech: adjective imagined in spanish: imaginado, pronunciation: ɪmædʒənd part of speech: adjective
Follow us