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View synonyms for image

image

[ im-ij ]

noun

  1. a physical likeness or representation of a person, animal, or thing, photographed, painted, sculptured, or otherwise made visible.
  2. an optical counterpart or appearance of an object, as is produced by reflection from a mirror, refraction by a lens, or the passage of luminous rays through a small aperture and their reception on a surface.

    Synonyms: representation, figure, likeness

  3. a mental representation; idea; conception.

    Synonyms: notion

  4. Psychology. a mental representation of something previously perceived, in the absence of the original stimulus.
  5. form; appearance; semblance:

    We are all created in God's image.

  6. counterpart; copy:

    That child is the image of his mother.

    Synonyms: facsimile

    Antonyms: original

  7. a symbol; emblem.
  8. the general or public perception of a company, public figure, etc., especially as achieved by careful calculation aimed at creating widespread goodwill.
  9. a type; embodiment:

    Red-faced and angry, he was the image of frustration.

  10. a description of something in speech or writing:

    Keats created some of the most beautiful images in the language.

  11. Rhetoric. a figure of speech, especially a metaphor or a simile.
  12. an idol or representation of a deity:

    They knelt down before graven images.

  13. Mathematics. the point or set of points in the range corresponding to a designated point in the domain of a given function.
  14. Archaic. an illusion or apparition.


verb (used with object)

, im·aged, im·ag·ing.
  1. to picture or represent in the mind; imagine; conceive.
  2. to make an image of; portray in sculpture, painting, etc.
  3. to project (photographs, film, etc.) on a surface:

    Familiar scenes were imaged on the screen.

  4. to reflect the likeness of; mirror.
  5. to set forth in speech or writing; describe.
  6. to symbolize; typify.
  7. to resemble.
  8. Informal. to create an image for (a company, public figure, etc.):

    The candidate had to be imaged before being put on the campaign trail.

  9. to transform (data) into an exact replica in a different form, as changing digital data to pixels for display on a screen or representing a medical scan of a body part in digital form.

image

/ ˈɪmɪdʒ /

noun

  1. a representation or likeness of a person or thing, esp in sculpture
  2. an optically formed reproduction of an object, such as one formed by a lens or mirror
  3. a person or thing that resembles another closely; double or copy
  4. a mental representation or picture; idea produced by the imagination
  5. the personality presented to the public by a person, organization, etc See also corporate image

    a criminal charge is not good for a politician's image

  6. the pattern of light that is focused on to the retina of the eye
  7. psychol the mental experience of something that is not immediately present to the senses, often involving memory See also imagery body image hypnagogic image
  8. a personification of a specified quality; epitome

    the image of good breeding

  9. a mental picture or association of ideas evoked in a literary work, esp in poetry
  10. a figure of speech, such as a simile or metaphor
  11. maths
    1. (of a point) the value of a function, f( x ), corresponding to the point x
    2. the range of a function
  12. an obsolete word for apparition


verb

  1. to picture in the mind; imagine
  2. to make or reflect an image of
  3. computing to project or display on a screen or visual display unit
  4. to portray or describe
  5. to be an example or epitome of; typify

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Derived Forms

  • ˈimageless, adjective
  • ˈimageable, adjective

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Other Words From

  • image·a·ble adjective
  • imag·er noun
  • pre·image noun
  • re·image verb (used with object) reimaged reimaging
  • un·imaged adjective

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Word History and Origins

Origin of image1

First recorded in 1175–1225; (noun) Middle English from Old French image, imagene ( -ene apparently construed as suffix) from Latin imāgin-, stem of imāgō “a copy, likeness,” equivalent to im- ( imitate ) + -āgō noun suffix; (verb) Middle English: “to form a mental picture” from Old French imagier, derivative of image

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Word History and Origins

Origin of image1

C13: from Old French imagene, from Latin imāgō copy, representation; related to Latin imitārī to imitate

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Idioms and Phrases

see spitting image .

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Synonym Study

Image, icon, idol refer to material representations of persons or things. An image is a representation as in a statue or effigy, and is sometimes regarded as an object of worship: to set up an image of Apollo; an image of a saint. An icon, in the Greek or Eastern Orthodox Church, is a representation of Christ, an angel, or a saint, in painting, relief, mosaic, or the like: At least two icons are found in each church. An idol is an image, statue, or the like representing a deity and worshiped as such: a wooden idol; The heathen worship idols. It may be used figuratively: to make an idol of wealth.

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Example Sentences

If a pixel of the satellite image, which covers 1 square kilometer, contains fire, it is labeled a hot spot.

From Vox

In this very speech, he took a passing shot at “highly political” district attorneys trying “to remake state and local prosecutorial offices in their preferred progressive image.”

From Vox

Brand takeovers typically run for three to five seconds and are either videos or images.

The record number of women running for Congress is official after the last state primary, Barbados will remove the Queen as its head of state, and a model attempts to reclaim her image.

From Fortune

A week after the image was taken, things have only gone worse on the West Coast.

The effort to sterilize his image first began when Epstein hired Los Angeles-based spin doctors Sitrick Co.

Oh, and the first press image they released was a pair of black dudes in tracksuits as a troll of sorts to NME.

Of course, Kim Jong-Un takes an image hit as a Katy Perry-obsessed, margarita-drinking maniac with daddy issues.

When his agent asked if he missed his wife, his mind flashed to an image of Alison.

What image are you hoping people who pick up this book and read it, come away with?

This harmless image of a fierce beast Yung Pak would pull about the floor with a string by the hour.

The object is to produce a concurrence or connection between the sight-image of the Person and a sound-image of his Name.

In return, each of the priests placed an image of Buddha on a tree-root, turning it into an altar.

The stainless image fearing to disturb,So faithfully reflected in my breast;As winds disturb the mirror of the lake.

The image stillWas seen, and in the sun's uncertain lightAbove my couch she seemed to linger still.

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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023

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

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