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A person with unusual powers of foresight
Answer for the clue "A person with unusual powers of foresight ", 9 letters:
visionary
Word definitions for visionary in dictionaries
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
adj. not practical or realizable; speculative; "airy theories about socioeconomic improvement"; "visionary schemes for getting rich" [syn: airy , impractical , Laputan ] n. a person given to fanciful speculations and enthusiasms with little regard for what ...
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Visionary is a 1976 studio album by guitarist Gordon Giltrap . The music is inspired by the words of poet William Blake .
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
I. adjective COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS ■ NOUN experience ▪ Now words become means to mediate a visionary experience of love and enlarge understanding. ▪ The immediacy of these visionary experiences endows them with a high degree of intensity, but also renders ...
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
"able to see visions," 1650s (earlier "perceived in a vision," 1640s), from vision + -ary . Meaning "impractical" is attested from 1727. The noun is attested from 1702, from the adjective; originally "one who indulges in impractical fantasies."
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Visionary \Vi"sion*a*ry\, n.; pl. Visionaries . One whose imagination is disturbed; one who sees visions or phantoms. One whose imagination overpowers his reason and controls his judgment; an unpractical schemer; one who builds castles in the air; a daydreamer. ...
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
a. 1 having vision or foresight 2 imaginary or illusory 3 prophetic or revelatory 4 idealistic or utopian n. 1 someone who has visions; a seer 2 an impractical dreamer 3 someone who has positive ideas about the future
Usage examples of visionary.
Consequently the concentration of carbon dioxide in the alveolar air and the blood is increased and, the efficiency of the cerebral reducing valve being lowered, visionary experience becomes possible.
These streets, even if visited by someone in his waking hours, by some stranger in the fullness of health and sanity, and under the living and practical light of noon or, more particularly, by some man stunned with drink, who came there at some desolate and empty hour of night, might have a kind of cataleptic horror, a visionary unreality, as if some great maniac of architecture had conceived and shaped the first harsh, ugly pattern of brown angularity, and then repeated it, without a change, into the infinity of illimitable repetition, with the mad and measureless insistence of an idiotic monotony.
The mystical visions themselves, concludes Rabbi Hai Gaon, are all historically true, successors to a long tradition of visionary transformations experienced by biblical saints and prophets in higher states of consciousness.
Hai Gaon, however, one rebellious voice spoke out against hiding the details of the visionary journey from the common man.
Overnight, abandoned cornfields bloomed with head-high purple ironweed, burning and blinding and visionary.
And it is precisely this which gives them their numinous quality, their power to transport the beholder out of the Old World of his everyday experience, far away, towards the visionary antipodes of the human psyche.
A Platonist who pretends that one is able to live with a young woman of whom one is fond, without becoming more than her friend, is a visionary who knows not what he says.
And wondrous vision wrought from my despair, Then grew, like sweet reality among Dim visionary woes, an unreposing throng.
La Tour was one of those extroverted visionaries, whose art faithfully reflects certain aspects of the outer world, but reflects them in a state of transfigurement, so that every meanest particular becomes intrinsically significant, a manifestation of the absolute.
Philosophy directed by metaphysics ends in visionary extravagance, 693-m.
By the middle of the nineteenth century pyrotechny had reached a peak of technical perfection and was capable of transporting vast multitudes of spectators towards the visionary antipodes of minds which, consciously, were respectable Methodist, Puseyites, Utilitarians, disciples of Mill or Marx, of Newman, or Bradlaugh, or Samuel Smiles.
This visionary address was so deeply impressed upon my mind, that it was long before I could recompose my spirits, or convince myself it was but a dream.
The materials for such visionary Edens have evidently been accumulated from direct experience, but they are recomposed by him into such scenes as never had mortal eye beheld.
Rousseau told me that he died of poison, but he is a visionary who sees the black side of everything.
This old man, tottering on the edge of the grave, and prolonging his prospect through millions of calculated years,--this visionary who had not seen starvation in the wasted forms of his wife and children, or plague in the horrible sights and sounds that surrounded him--this astronomer, apparently dead on earth, and living only in the motion of the spheres--loved his family with unapparent but intense affection.