| image |
A symbol in its aspect as a formal unit of art with a natural content.
Ãâó: www.sil.org/~radneyr/humanities/litcrit/gloss.htm
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| image |
Two-dimensional reproduction of a subject formed by a lens. When formed on a surface, ie a ground-glass screen, it is a real image; if in space, ie when the screen is removed, it is an aerial image. The image seen through a telescope optical viewfinder, etc. cannot be focused on a surface without the aid of another optical system and is a virtual image.
Ãâó: www.rodsmith.org.uk/photographic%20glossary/rods%2...
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| imagery |
means both the images and figures of speech used in a work. Images are descriptions of people, places, or things -- usually written for visual comprehension, though sometimes for other senses. Imagery in the sense of "figure of speech" means the metaphors, similes, and symbols used rhetorically to give a more abstract definition of a person, place, or thing.
Ãâó: www.cwru.edu/artsci/engl/marling/hardboiled/Glossa...
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| imagery |
the elements in a literary work used to evoke mental images, not only of the visual sense, but of sensation and emotion as well
Ãâó: www.iclasses.org/assets/literature/literary_glossa...
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| imagination |
A term which today has a totally different, even opposite meaning. The "old imagination" is the ability to make images of (external or "internal") circumstances, and the converse ability to recognize these circumstances in the images. In other words: the ability to encode phenomena in two-dimensional symbols and to read these symbols. ...
Ãâó: www.equivalence.com/labor/lab_vf_glo_e.shtml
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