0 present participle of perceive --
1 to come to an opinion about something, or have a belief about something: --
Women's magazines are often perceived to be superficial.
How do the French perceive the British?
2 to see something or someone, or to notice something that is obvious: --
There is only "knowledge" of objects as embedded in the immediate circumstances and the history of perceiving and acting in similar circumstances.
The significance of both in a psychology of perceiving space is that neither is static; indeed change and temporal rhythm are implied.
Only in recent years have special kinetic methods and traps been devised for perceiving intermediates.
But new landscapes also evoke strong emotions and the ways of perceiving new landscapes are also culturally determined.
This literature cannot be honestly examined without perceiving the diverse influences that have shaped it and that continue to inform it.
The research revealed a positive correlation between the learners' perceiving the communication task as authentic and the development of personal communicative competence.
The intellectual faculties contained the powers of perceiving, comparing, judging, reasoning, and generally being acquainted with the laws of the universe.
Perceiving must essentially involve the matching of external gestalts to internalized representations in long-term memory.