envisage

envisage
verb
envisaged; envisaging
Synonyms of envisage
transitive verb

1
: to view or regard in a certain way
envisages the slum as a hotbed of crime
2
: to have a mental picture of especially in advance of realization
envisages an entirely new system of education


envisage

 
verb | in-VIZ-ij
 
What It Means
 
To envisage something is to picture it in your mind, or to view or regard something in a particular way.
 
// She envisages many positive changes and opportunities in the New Year.
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Examples of ENVISAGE
 
“Amid all his onscreen work, [Sheb] Wooley never stopped writing songs. And the one that took off … was ‘The Purple People Eater,’ which skewered the musical crazes of the time by envisaging a grotesque space invader taking the bait.” — Morgan Enos, UDiscoverMusic.com, 31 Oct. 2023
 
 
Did You Know?
 
Envisage this: a word is borrowed from French in the mid-17th century and sticks around to be used in the 21st. It’s not hard to picture; envisage is not alone in this accomplishment. Used today to mean “to have a mental picture of something, especially in advance of realization” and “to view or regard something in a certain way,” envisage for a time could also mean “to confront or face someone.” That use, which is now archaic, nods to the word’s origin: we borrowed envisage from French, but the visage part is from Anglo-French vis, meaning “face.” (It reaches back ultimately to Greek idein, “to see.”) Visage is of course also an English word. It entered English much earlier, in the 14th century, and is typically used today in literary contexts to refer to a person’s face. Envisage isn’t necessarily restricted to literary contexts, but it does have a formal tone. Its near twin envision (“to picture to oneself”), which has been with us since the 19th century, is interchangeable with envisage in many contexts and is somewhat less formal.
 


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