1. Vision. Avoir une bonne vue.
2. Regard. Détourner la vue.
3. Spectacle.
4. Paysage. Une belle vue.
5. Image. Une vue de Paris.
6. Opinion. Un échange de vues.
7. (Au pluriel) Desseins. Avoir des vues sur quelque chose.
Use of the faculty of vision; SYN. seeing, sightedness.
The future; what one can surmise about the future
1. The appearance of a place.
2. The painted structures of a stage set that are intended to suggest a particular locale; SYN. scene.
The detection of light by an eye, which can form images of the outside world.
ETYM Old Fren. veue, French vue, from Old Fren. veoir to see, p. p. veu, French voir, p. p. vu, from Latin videre to see. Related to Vision, and cl. Interview, Purview, Review, Vista.
1. Outward appearance.
2. The act of looking or seeing or observing; SYN. survey, sight.
3. The phrase means.
4. The range of the eye; SYN. eyeshot.
5. The visual percept of a region; SYN. aspect, prospect, scene, vista, panorama.
ETYM Old Eng. visioun, French vision, from Latin visio, from videre, visum, to see.
1. A religious or mystical experience of a supernatural appearance.
2. A vivid mental image.
3. The perceptual experience of seeing; SYN. visual sensation.
1. Considéré. Un employé bien vu.
2. Compris. Un exercice bien vu.