Tuesday, October 22, 2019
Imaginary vs. Imaginative
Imaginary vs. Imaginative Imaginary vs. Imaginative Imaginary vs. Imaginative By Maeve Maddox Reading that a child in Texas was suspended for bringing ââ¬Å"an imaginary ringâ⬠to school, I marveled that the school officials were able to detect the ringââ¬â¢s presence. Hereââ¬â¢s the headline: Texas School Suspends 9-Year-Old for Terrorism Because He Brought Imaginary Hobbit Ring To School In fact, the child brought a real ring to school, presumably a replica of the ring carried by Bilbo Baggins in the Peter Jackson movie The Hobbit. The ring was real, but its magical powers were imaginary. The English word image derives from Latin imago. One meaning of image is ââ¬Å"mental picture.â⬠Something imaginary or imagined exists in the mind. Here is a review of image words with definitions and examples: imagination (noun): The power or capacity to form internal images or ideas of objects and situations not actually present to the senses. Example: It is because of theà development of the imaginationà during childhood that adults are able to do many of the tasks that daily life demands.à imaginary (adjective): Existing only in imagination or fancy; having no real existence; not real or actual. Example: Lilliput is an imaginary country visited by Gulliver. imaginative (adjective): relating to, or concerned in the exercise of imagination as a mental faculty. Example: Imaginative Artists Find New Ways to Deal With the Western Landscape Tradition imagine (verb): conceive in the mind. Example: The universe is not only stranger thanà weà imagine, it is stranger thanà we can imagine. imagined (past participle): invented, created in the imagination. Example: The second basic axiom concerning power is that the powerful always try to createà an outside enemy, real or imagined, to bind the followers to the leaders.à Errors also occur with the pairs imaginary/imagined and imaginary/imaginative: Incorrect: It is easy toà perceiveà a country as anà imaginary enemy. Correct : It is easy toà perceiveà a country as anà imagined enemy. The country actually exists, so it canââ¬â¢t be imaginary. It can, however, be ââ¬Å"an imagined enemy.â⬠Incorrect: Children learn from experience: from what happens around them, from what they see, hear, smell, taste and touch.à To absorb those experiences and make sense of the world, they need to be engaged in imaginary play. Correct : Children learn from experience: from what happens around them, from what they see, hear, smell, taste and touch.à To absorb those experiences and make sense of the world, they need to be engaged in imaginative play. The play is not imaginary; it is real. Because the child is exercising imagination, the play is imaginative. Want to improve your English in five minutes a day? Get a subscription and start receiving our writing tips and exercises daily! Keep learning! Browse the Misused Words category, check our popular posts, or choose a related post below:85 Synonyms for ââ¬Å"Helpâ⬠Latin Words and Expressions: All You Need to KnowAppropriate vs. Apropos vs. Apt
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