释义 |
perceived, ppl. a.|pəˈsiːvd| [f. prec. + -ed1.] †1. (Cf. perceive v. 4 b.) Having perception; aware; wary, circumspect, wise. Obs.
c1400Laud Troy Bk. 14588 Thei sayde ‘that Troyens were dissayued, And that thei were not persayued To graunte the trewes when thei it asked’. 2. Apprehended, seized with the mind, observed.
c1440Promp. Parv. 382/2 Parceyvyd, perceptus. 1573–80Baret Alv. P 264 Plainly perceiued, or knowen: manifest, euident, perspectus. 1704Norris Ideal World ii. Pref. 11 The perceived agreement of this idea with the extreams. 1875Whitney Life Lang. xiv. 290 Available for perceived needs. 1943M. Farber Found. Phenomenology xii. 335 If the eruption is therefore to be critically judged as a deception,..illusion, etc., then the perceived, seen color of the object also does not exist. 1971Nature 19 Feb. 518/1 Mr Stein's apparently innocent bill to limit noise at New York airports to 108 perceived noise decibels by July..could be..a serious threat to the viability of Concorde. 1973Jrnl. Genetic Psychol. CXXII. 269 The study of perceived (subjective) age changes. 1976Times Lit. Suppl. 3 Sept. 1080/2 In all these instances the KKE was reacting to actual or perceived efforts to destroy it. Hence perceivedly |pəˈsiːvɪdlɪ| adv.; perˈceivedness. rare.
1625in Rushw. Hist. Coll. (1659) I. 189 Our Allies in those parts will be suddenly and perceivedly strengthened and enabled. 1871Athenæum 24 June 779 Prof. Fraser..stating as Berkeley's ultimate doctrine, that the condition of sensible things during the intervals of our perception of them was one of potential perceivedness or perceivability. 1967S. Beckett Film 32 Anguish of perceivedness. |