perspective
/pɚˈspɛk.tɪv/
PɚSPƐK · tɪv (2 syllables)
English
Noun Top 4,959
American (Lessac)
(medium)
Female
1.1s
American (Amy)
(medium)
Female
1.0s
American (Ryan)
(medium)
Male
0.7s
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Definition
A view, vista or outlook.
Etymology
From Middle English perspective, perspectif, attested since 1381, from Old French or Middle French, from the first word of the Medieval Latin perspectiva ars (“science of optics”), the feminine of Latin perspectivus (“of sight, optical”), from perspectus, the past participle of perspicere (“to inspect, look through”), itself from per- (“through”) + specere (“to look at”); the noun sense was influenced or mediated by Italian prospettiva, from prospetto (“prospect”).
Example Sentences
- "And according to Hughes, HM Treasury is still sceptical about rail electrification. "It's not because they don't see electrification as a good thing, but I think when you look at it from the UK-wide perspective, if you have £x billion to spend on decarbonisation, you don't necessarily start with rail. Rail's not where you get the biggest bang for the buck in terms of decarbonisation.""
- "[…] our predecessors; who could never have believed, that there were such lunets about some of the planets, as our late perspectives have descried […]"
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