to picture to oneself

  • 1put oneself across — verb To explain ones ideas and opinions clearly so that another person can understand them and get a picture of your personality. It is very important to put yourself across well at a job interview …

    Wiktionary

  • 2thinking to oneself —  as in I thought to myself: ‘We’re lost,’ is always tautological; there is no one else to whom one can think. Delete to myself. Similarly vacuous is in my mind in constructions like I could picture in my mind where the offices had been …

    Bryson’s dictionary for writers and editors

  • 3thinking to oneself —     Somehow he must have thought to himself that this unfamiliar line needed to be ascribed to someone rather more venerable (Sunday Telegraph) , Can it be that the Sunday Times Magazine is paying no attention to my book? Frank Delaney was… …

    Dictionary of troublesome word

  • 4Representational systems (NLP) — NLP TOPICS   …

    Wikipedia

  • 5fancy — /ˈfænsi / (say fansee) noun (plural fancies) 1. imagination, especially as exercised in a capricious or desultory manner. 2. the faculty of creating illustrative or decorative imagery, as in poetical or literary composition, sometimes seen as… …

  • 6fancy — n., adj., & v. n. (pl. ies) 1 an individual taste or inclination (take a fancy to). 2 a caprice or whim. 3 a thing favoured, e.g. a horse to win a race. 4 an arbitrary supposition. 5 a the faculty of using imagination or of inventing imagery. b a …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 7feature — n 1. features face, countenance, visage, physiognomy, Sl. mug, Sl. kisser, Sl. puss; looks, lineaments. 2.(all of the face) cast, form, turn, shape, figure, configuration, Inf. cut of one s jib; appearance, expression, look, lineament, aspect;… …

    A Note on the Style of the synonym finder

  • 8envision — transitive verb Date: 1855 to picture to oneself < envisions a career dedicated to promoting peace > Synonyms: see think …

    New Collegiate Dictionary

  • 9fancy — fanciness, n. /fan see/, n., pl. fancies, adj., fancier, fanciest, v., fancied, fancying, interj. n. 1. imagination or fantasy, esp. as exercised in a capricious manner. 2. the artistic ability of creating unreal or whimsical imagery, decorative&#8230; …

    Universalium

  • 10image — [13] Latin imāgō meant a ‘likeness of something’ (it probably came from the same source as imitate). It subsequently developed a range of secondary senses, such as ‘echo’ and ‘ghost’, which have not survived the journey via Old French into&#8230; …

    The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins