0 Something that is imaginary is created by and exists only in the mind: --
1 existing only in the mind; not real: --
All her worries were imaginary.
The interpretation is also imaginary for all spaces embedded in counterfactual or other distanced spaces.
The stimulus patches were sectors of an imaginary annulus centered on the fixation point.
Designing only imaginary projects can over-intellectualize the design process and distance a designer from architectural issues which affect people's real lives.
Even so, we may see in the nineteenth century, in differing forms and situations, concerns that still dominate the cultural imaginary.
The meromorphy bar s the existence of certain configurations, while other s are explained by assuming imaginary residues.
In this imaginary situation, you could eventually come to think that you were somehow causing the movement.
Unlike many other travel works of his day, however, he did not back-date these letters or devise a fictive dialogue with an imaginary correspondent.
These changes and control of space echoed the state endeavour to create anew the social imaginary that symbolized a more "civilized" future with economic success.