亚洲网紅露点

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View synonyms for

picture

[ pik-cher ]

noun

  1. a visual representation of a person, object, or scene, as a painting, drawing, photograph, etc.:

    I carry a picture of my grandchild in my wallet.

  2. any visible image, however produced:

    pictures reflected in a pool of water.

  3. a mental image:

    a clear picture of how he had looked that day.

  4. a particular image or reality as portrayed in an account or description; depiction; version.
  5. a tableau, as in theatrical representation.
    1. a movie:

      He signed a three-picture deal to star in the new franchise.

    2. pictures, Older Use. movies collectively, as an art; cinema:

      So, you want to be in pictures?

  6. a person, thing, group, or scene regarded as resembling a work of pictorial art in beauty, fineness of appearance, etc.:

    She was a picture in her new blue dress.

  7. the image or perfect likeness of someone else:

    He is the picture of his father.

  8. a visible or concrete embodiment of some quality or condition:

    the picture of health.

  9. a situation or set of circumstances:

    the economic picture.

  10. the image on a computer monitor, the viewing screen of a television set, or a motion-picture screen.


verb (used with object)

pictured, picturing.
  1. to represent in a picture or pictorially, as by painting or drawing.

    Synonyms: , , ,

  2. to form a mental picture of; imagine:

    He couldn't picture himself doing such a thing.

  3. to depict in words; describe graphically:

    He pictured Rome so vividly that you half-believed you were there.

    Synonyms: , , ,

  4. to present or create as a setting; portray:

    His book pictured the world of the future.

picture

/ 藞辫瑟办迟蕛蓹 /

noun

    1. a visual representation of something, such as a person or scene, produced on a surface, as in a photograph, painting, etc
    2. ( as modifier ) pictorial

      picture postcard

      picture gallery

  1. a mental image or impression

    a clear picture of events

  2. a verbal description, esp one that is vivid
  3. a situation considered as an observable scene

    the political picture

  4. a person or thing that bears a close resemblance to another

    he was the picture of his father

  5. a person, scene, etc, considered as typifying a particular state or quality

    the picture of despair

  6. a beautiful person or scene

    you'll look a picture

  7. a complete image on a television screen, comprising two interlaced fields
    1. a motion picture; film
    2. ( as modifier )

      picture theatre

  8. the pictures
    a cinema or film show
  9. another name for tableau vivant
  10. get the picture informal.
    to understand a situation
  11. in the picture
    informed about a given situation
鈥淐ollins English Dictionary 鈥 Complete & Unabridged鈥 2012 Digital Edition 漏 William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 漏 HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

verb

  1. to visualize or imagine
  2. to describe or depict, esp vividly
  3. often passive to put in a picture or make a picture of

    they were pictured sitting on the rocks

鈥淐ollins English Dictionary 鈥 Complete & Unabridged鈥 2012 Digital Edition 漏 William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 漏 HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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Other 亚洲网紅露点 Forms

  • 辫颈肠路迟耻谤路补路产濒别 adjective
  • 辫颈肠路迟耻谤路补路产濒别路ness noun
  • 辫颈肠路迟耻谤路补路产濒测 adverb
  • 辫颈肠路迟耻谤路别谤 noun
  • 尘颈蝉路辫颈肠路迟耻谤别 verb (used with object) mispictured mispicturing
  • 蝉别濒蹿-辫颈肠路迟耻谤别诲 adjective
  • 耻苍路辫颈肠路迟耻谤别诲 adjective
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亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins

Origin of picture1

First recorded in 1375鈥1425; late Middle English, from Latin 辫颈肠迟奴谤补 鈥渢he act of painting, a painting,鈥 equivalent to pict(us) (past participle of pingere 鈥渢o paint鈥 ) + -奴谤补 noun suffix; paint, -ure
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亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins

Origin of picture1

C15: from Latin 辫颈肠迟奴谤补 painting, from pingere to paint
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Idioms and Phrases

In addition to the idiom beginning with picture , also see get the message (picture) ; in the picture ; pretty as a picture ; take a picture ; the picture .
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

鈥淗e saw the talent. He had a bigger, broader picture.鈥

From

As for what makes Imax 70mm so special, the film camera is generally considered the highest resolution motion picture camera ever developed.

From

There's a bigger picture: India is downstream of China in the Brahmaputra basin, and the Indus originates in Tibet.

From

Packham was hoping that by getting a whole range of activists together on a single stage "they would all see the bigger picture and recognise that there are far more commonalities between them than differences."

From

To build a bigger picture of crime in England and Wales, the ONS also refers to estimates from its crime survey.

From

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More About Picture

Where does聽辫颈肠迟耻谤别听come from?

A picture, as they say, is worth a thousand words. But what about the word picture? We鈥檙e not going to write a thousand words on picture鈥攁lthough we could. Believe us when we say we could. So, here鈥檚 a briefer word picture (see what we did there?) on the origin of this versatile word.

In its most general sense, a picture is a visual representation of something, especially in the form of a painting, drawing, photograph, or the like. A picture can also refer to a mental image, among other senses. One meaning of picture, as a verb, is 鈥渢o represent something in a picture or 辫颈肠迟辞谤颈补濒濒测鈥浓赌pictorial being a related adjective form variously used to refer to pictures.

The word picture entered English around 1375鈥1425, borrowed directly from the Latin word 辫颈肠迟奴谤补, 鈥渢he act of painting, a painting.鈥 The word is based on pict(us), the past participle of the verb pingere, meaning 鈥渢o paint.鈥 The verb could also mean 鈥渢o draw, embroider, represent,鈥 among other senses. The second part of 辫颈肠迟奴谤补 is -奴谤补, a noun suffix represented as -ure in English. See our entry at ure to learn more about this suffix.

Dig deeper

The meaning of the word picture has been very stable in English. Just as it originally did in the late 1300s, a picture can still refer to a drawing or painting鈥 whether it鈥檚 your kid鈥檚 crayon-scrawled family portrait on your fridge or Leonardo DaVinci鈥檚 Mona Lisa in the Louvre. Both are masterpieces, as far as we鈥檙e concerned. Please note, though, that when referring to formal or professional works, we often use the name of the medium (painting, photograph, film), with picture referring to more informal or amateur creations.

But picture has also been remarkably adaptable, readily lending itself to images created by new technologies: photography, cinema, TV, and all the pictures we take on our smartphones and post on social media.

The word movie鈥攊t鈥檚 easy to forget in an age of Netflix streaming and viral TikTok videos鈥攊s shortened from the phrase moving picture. And what are digital images composed of? Tiny pixels. That word is based on pix, a variant of pics, a common shortening of picture. A picture, we might say today, is worth (many) thousands of pixels.

Did you know ... ?

As we noted in the previous section, picture ultimately comes from the Latin verb pingere. Picture is not the only word English gets from this root, however.

Pingere evolved into the Old French peindre, whose past participle was peint, source of the English paint and related forms. That means a painting, etymologically speaking, is a picture.

Did you know these words are also rooted in the Latin pingere, 鈥渢o paint鈥?

Definitions and idiom definitions from 亚洲网紅露点 Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, 漏 Random House, Inc. 2023

Idioms from The American Heritage庐 Idioms Dictionary copyright 漏 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.

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