0 to imagine something:
1 to invent a plan or an idea:
He conceived the plot for this film while he was still a student.
The exhibition was conceived by the museum's director.
3 to bring a thought or idea into being; imagine:
[ I always + adv/prep ] When they talk about billions of dollars, I can’t even conceive of that much money.
[ + question word ] It’s hard to conceive what the world will be like a hundred years from now.
4 to become pregnant, or to cause a baby to begin to form
Hence, it is difficult to explain why players would conceive of the simultaneous move game in sequential terms.
Again, it is difficult to conceive of an explanation of this replay of activity patterns that does not involve memory consolidation, transfer, or integration.
In the first instance, it is difficult to conceive what might motivate such random substitutions.
This was conceived around euthymia, an absence of affective symptoms.
These trajectories can be conceived as frames of references indicating the nature of the change to be expected.
As we conceive it, the problem concerns certain properties that are represented by the human visual system and those of a variety of other animals.
The profound differences among the religious traditions are due to the different ways in which the transcendent reality is experienced and conceived in human life.
Then, a new structure was conceived in order to lessen the disadvantages of the earlier structure.
中文繁体
想像, 想出, 構想…
More中文简体
想象, 想出, 构想…
MoreEspañol
concebir (a), concebir…
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conceber, imaginar…
More日本語
身ごもる, ~を想像する, 思いつく…
MoreTürk dili
gebe/hamile kalmak, tasavvur etmek, tasarlamak…
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concevoir, penser à, comprendre…
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concebre…
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