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Picture I Shows Situation Paint Children Drawing Artist

Word picture
WordType (noun)
Phonetic BrE / ˈpɪktʃə(r) / NAmE / ˈpɪktʃər /
Example
  • a picture of flowers hung on the wall.
  • the children were drawing pictures of their pets.
  • she wanted a famous artist to paint her picture (= a picture of herself).
  • a book with lots of pictures in it
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Content

picture

(noun)BrE / ˈpɪktʃə(r) / NAmE / ˈpɪktʃər /
  1. a painting or drawing, etc. that shows a scene, a person or thing
    • A picture of flowers hung on the wall.
    • The children were drawing pictures of their pets.
    • She wanted a famous artist to paint her picture (= a picture of herself).
    • a book with lots of pictures in it
    • The children were drawing pictures of their pets.
    • a collection of paintings by American artists
    • a pencil/charcoal drawing
    • Vermeer’s ‘Portrait of the artist in his studio’
    • a self-portrait (= a painting that you do of yourself)
    • a Renoir print
    • I usually do a few very rough sketches before I start on a painting.
  2. a photograph
    • We had our picture taken in front of the hotel.
    • The picture shows the couple together on their yacht.
    • Have you got any pictures of your trip?
    • a photograph of the house
    • Can I take a photograph?
    • We had our picture taken in front of the hotel.
    • a passport photo
    • I tried to get a shot of him in the water.
    • holiday snaps
    • a set of prints
    • The picture shows a family gathered around a kitchen table.
    • This is a picture/photo of a busy city street.
    • In the foreground/background, we can see a group of protesters.
    • In the bottom right-hand corner/top left-hand corner, there's a child sitting alone.
    • On the left/On the right/In the middle, someone is standing with a bottle in his hand.
    • In the cartoon, we can see two people looking at a newspaper headline.
    • The cartoonist has drawn the man to represent a typical businessman.
  3. an image on a television screen
    • harrowing television pictures of the famine
    • satellite pictures
    • The picture isn't very clear tonight.
  4. a description that gives you an idea in your mind of what something is like
    • The writer paints a gloomy picture of the economy.
    • The police are trying to build up a picture of what happened.
    • From newspaper reports a picture emerges of a country barely under control.
    • The TV report painted a much rosier picture of the employment situation than research shows to be the case.
  5. a mental image or memory of something
    • I have a vivid picture of my grandfather smiling down at me when I was very small.
  6. the general situation concerning somebody/something
    • Just a few years ago the picture was very different.
    • The overall picture for farming is encouraging.
  7. a film/movie
    • see also motion picture
      https://www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/definition/english/motion-picture
    • The movie won nine Academy Awards, including Best Picture.
    • I believe her husband's in pictures (= he acts in movies or works in the movie industry).
  8. the cinema/the movies
    • Shall we go to the pictures tonight?
  9. very pretty
    • She’s as pretty as a picture.
  10. to look very beautiful or special
    • The garden looks a picture in the summer.
  11. to look extremely healthy, guilty, unhappy, etc.
  12. the situation as a whole
    • Right now forget the details and take a look at the big picture.
  13. to understand a situation, especially one that somebody is describing to you
    • ‘I pretended that I hadn't heard.’ ‘I get the picture.’
  14. involved/not involved in a situation
    • Morris is likely to win, with Jones out of the picture now.
  15. to describe somebody/something in a particular way; to give a particular impression of somebody/something
    • The report paints a vivid picture of life in the city.
    • Journalists paint a grim picture of conditions in the camps.
  16. to give somebody the information they need in order to understand a situation
    • Just to put you in the picture—there have been a number of changes here recently.

    Extra Examples

    • He didn’t paint a very pretty picture of city life.
    • I believe her husband’s in pictures= he acts in movies or works in the industry.
    • I can’t see you in the picture.
    • I got some good pictures of the procession.
    • I tried to form a mental picture of the building being described.
    • It’s a picture of a country village.
    • It’s a picture of the Grand Canyon.
    • My visits enabled me to build up a broad picture of the culture.
    • The book gives a vivid picture of life in Victorian England.
    • The book has simple stories and pictures to colour in.
    • The documentary didn’t give the full picture.
    • The figures reveal a disturbing picture of the state of our schools.
    • The programme was interesting but it didn’t give the full picture.
    • The report paints a dismal picture of the government’s economic record.
    • The smell of the sea conjures up pictures of children playing on the beach.
    • The smell of the sea conjures up pictures of my youth.
    • The story is told in pictures.
    • They’re trying to build up a detailed picture of the incident.
    • Through interviews and old photos we put together a composite picture of life in the village a hundred years ago.
    • What emerges is a complex picture of family rivalry.
    • a composite picture of life a hundred years ago
    • a major motion picture starring Brent Everett
    • the award for best picture
    • From newspaper reports a picture emerges of a country barely under control.
    • He likes books with lots of pictures in them.
    • His picture appeared in the local paper.
    • I believe her husband’s in pictures.
    • I had a sudden and chilling mental picture of him being interrogated in one of their prisons.
    • She got a famous artist to paint her picture.
    • She had formed a picture of what the place would look like and was very disappointed.
    • The TV report painted a much rosier picture of the employment situation than research shows to be the case.
    • The police are trying to build up a picture of what happened.
    • This picture shows the man with his family.

    Word Origin

    • late Middle English: from Latin pictura, from pict- ‘painted’ (from the verb pingere).
Copyright This card's content is collected from the following dictionaries: Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

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