imagination
n. 想象(力); 幻想物; 創造力
Your imagination is the ability that you have to form pictures or ideas in your mind of things that are new and exciting, or things that you have not experienced.
Antonia is a woman with a vivid imagination...
安東尼婭是個想象力豐富的女人。
Alistair had a logical mind, and little imagination...
阿利斯泰爾邏輯思維能力很強,但缺乏想象力。
Your imagination is the part of your mind which allows you to form pictures or ideas of things that do not necessarily exist in real life.
Long before I ever went there, Africa was alive in my imagination.
早在我真正踏足之前很久,非洲就已在我的腦海中活靈活現了。
If you say that someone or something captured your imagination, you mean that you thought they were interesting or exciting when you saw them or heard them for the first time.
Italian football captured the imagination of the nation last season.
上個賽季義大利足球吸引了全國上下的注意。
If you say that something stretches your imagination, you mean that it is good because it makes you think about things that you had not thought about before.
Their films are exciting and really stretch the imagination.
他們的電影非常精彩且發人深省。
1. the formation of a mental image of something that is not perceived as real and is not present to the senses;
2. the ability to form mental images of things or events;
3. the ability to deal resourcefully with unusual problems;
imagination, fancy, fantasy
這些名詞均含有"想象,幻想"之意。
Her pains are mostly pure imagination.
她的疼痛多半是純粹想像出來的東西.
The novel " Pilgrimage to the West'shows plenty of imagination.
小說《西遊記》表現出豐富的想像力.
The Romantics believed that the life of the imagination was intrinsically valuable.
浪漫主義作家認為想像的生命力本身就很重要.
The writer's imagination seems to have dried up.
這位作家的想像力好像己經枯竭了.
Poems are the product of a poet's imagination.
詩是詩人想象力的產物.