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单词 idea
释义

idean.

Brit. /ʌɪˈdɪə/, U.S. /aɪˈdiə/
Forms: Middle English ideie, Middle English ydea, Middle English ydeye, 1500s–1600s idaea, 1500s–1600s ideae, 1500s–1600s ideae (plural), 1500s–1600s ideaes (plural), 1500s– idea, 1600s idaeae (plural), 1600s idaeaes (plural), 1600s (1800s– regional and nonstandard) ideah, 1800s ideer (U.S. regional), 1800s– idaia (Scottish), 1800s– (regional and nonstandard) idear, 1900s– aideah (U.S. regional (chiefly southern and south Midland)), 1900s– idaya (Scottish). See also idee n.
Origin: A borrowing from Latin. Etymon: Latin idea.
Etymology: < classical Latin idea (in Platonic philosophy) eternal archetype, in post-classical Latin also form, image, likeness (from 8th cent. in British sources), image existing in the mind (13th cent. in a British source) < ancient Greek ἰδέα form, appearance, kind, sort, class, (in Platonic philosophy) general or ideal form, archetype, notion < the stem of ἰδεῖν to see (see wit v.1) + -έα , suffix forming nouns. The Greek word is thus analogous in derivation and original sense to classical Latin speciēs species n. ( < specere to see, behold: see suspect v.). Compare later idee n.In later use influenced semantically by Anglo-Norman idie, Anglo-Norman and Middle French idee, ydee, French idée (c1119 in Anglo-Norman), whose principal senses include: ‘visible and distinctive form of an object, archetype’ (c1119), ‘eternal archetype, existing only in the mind, of objects which can be apprehended with the senses’ (1370), ‘conception or notion of something to be done or carried out’ (1458; apparently rare before the late 17th cent.), ‘image, form, likeness’ (1487, glossing post-classical Latin idea ), ‘perfect beauty as embodied in a beloved lady’ (mid 16th cent.; compare sense 3b), ‘image of an object as perceived by the senses’ (1552), ‘mental image or notion of something previously seen or known’ (1564), ‘conception’ (1583), ‘ideal’ (early 17th cent.; now regional (Walloon)), ‘preliminary sketch’ (1610, originally with reference to a literary work), ‘whatever is in the mind and directly present to cognitive consciousness’ (1637 in Descartes, in the passage translated in quot. 1649 at sense 12b), ‘something merely imagined or fancied’ (1651; compare the similar sense ‘daydream’ (1672; rare), and earlier par idée ‘in imagination’ (1616), en idée (see in idea at Phrases 1)), ‘sum of a person's thoughts and judgements which constitute an opinion’ (1662), ‘musical theme, phrase, or figure as conceived or sketched before being worked up in a composition’ (1866 in idée musicale ). Compare Catalan idea (14th cent.), Spanish idea (early 15th cent.), Portuguese idéia (c1543 as †ydea , 1548 as †idea ), Italian idea (beginning of the 14th cent.); also Middle Dutch ydee (1465; Dutch idee ), German Idee (17th cent.; 1528 in Latinate form idea ), Swedish idé (beginning of the 18th cent.; also †idee , †idée ). The term first entered the modern European languages in senses which were either identical with, or very similar to, the Platonic sense (see branch I.); sense 3 shows semantic overlap with ideal n. The later semantic development is characterized, in English as well as in other European languages, by two tendencies. On the one hand, a gradual semantic generalization and popularization of the originally philosophical term took place, leading to partial synonymy with concept n., notion n., thought n., etc. On the other hand, philosophers from Descartes onwards developed new senses of the term (see branch III.). Broadly speaking, the specific philosophical uses in sense 12b developed out of the uses of the word in branch III., and represented a break with the Platonic tradition in that ideas were now considered to be perceptible by the senses or present in the mind as the natural objects or contents of human cognitive consciousness in general. On the other hand, the uses in sense 1 arose by extension of Platonic uses. Sense 1b is largely after Kant's use of German Idee (1781 (in his Kritik der reinen Vernunft) or earlier); in the relevant chapter of that work, entitled Von den Ideen überhaupt , Kant begins with a critical discussion of Plato's concept of the idea, and goes on to adapt this. Sense 1c is after Hegel's use of German Idee (1830 (in ed. 3 of his Enzyklopädie der philosophischen Wissenschaften im Grundrisse) or earlier). With in idea at Phrases 1 compare Spanish en idea (c1500; first half of the 15th cent. as en la idea ; also frequently with possessive pronoun: en su idea , etc.), French en idée (1643). With to have no idea at Phrases 2 compare French n'avoir aucune idée (1815 in colloquial use; already in 17th cent. in philosophical contexts in sense ‘to have no conception or understanding of (a problem)’; compare sense 11a). In form ideie apparently influenced by French; compare later idee n.
I. Senses relating to or derived from the Platonic concept of general or ideal form as distinguished from its realization in individual instances.
1.
a. In Platonic philosophy: an abstract or eternally existing pattern or archetype of any kind of thing, in relation to which particular things are conceived as imperfect copies or approximations, and often as deriving their existence from it; a nature or essence considered as existing separately from the particular things which exemplify it. Also in Theology: a thought or notion existing, esp. as an archetype, in the mind of God.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > philosophy > ancient Greek philosophy > post-Socratic philosophy > [noun] > Platonism > specific features
examplea1398
ideaa1398
irascible affection1398
idee1542
spicec1555
irascible1594
mundane spirit1642
evocation1646
anamnesis1656
mundane soul1665
species1678
theocrasy1842
a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add. 27944) (1975) I. iii. iv. 93 Pictogoras clepiþ þe soule armonye, acord of melody. And Paphinonius clepith it ydea, a maner example.
a1439 J. Lydgate Fall of Princes (Bodl. 263) iv. l. 1181 In the too scooles of prudent Socrates And of Plato, which that bar the keie Of secre mysteries & of dyvyn Ideie [a1475 Harl. 1245 Ideies].
1563 T. Gale Certaine Wks. Chirurg. i. f. 11 As one myght thynke hymselfe ryght happye, though he neuer dyd attayne to Aristoteles summum bonum, or Plato his Idæa.
1603 P. Holland tr. Plutarch Morals 813 Idea is a bodilesse substance, which of it selfe hath no subsistence, but giveth figure and forme unto shapelesse matters, and becommeth the very cause that bringeth them into shew and evidence. Socrates and Plato suppose, that these Ideæ bee substances separate and distinct from Matter, howbeit, subsisting in the thoughts and imaginations of God—that is to say, of Minde and Understanding.
1652 J. Gaule Πυς-μαντια sig. *v Chymericall figments, Platonicall Ideaes, Cabbalisticall fancies.
1656 T. Stanley Hist. Philos. II. v. 67 They define Idæa an eternall exemplar of things which are according to Nature...for Idæas are the eternall notions of God, perfect in themselves.
1706 tr. R. Rapin Crit. Wks. 376 Ammonius the Scholar of Proclus..wou'd have these Idea's, according to the Doctrine of Plato, to be Models entirely distinct and separate from God.
1791 W. Enfield Brucker's Hist. Philos. I. ii. vii. 229 Visible things were regarded by Plato as fleeting shades, and Ideas as the only permanent substances. These he conceived to be the proper objects of science, to a mind raised, by divine contemplation, above the perpetually varying scenes of the material world.
1829 N. Amer. Rev. July 110 In Plato, ideas are the archetypes or models of created things, which dwell eternally in the Divine Mind.
1856 J. F. Ferrier Inst. Metaphysic (ed. 2) vi. xviii. 176 Plato..had merely succeeded in carrying our cognitions up into certain subordinate unities, certain inferior universals, called by him ideas.
1885 W. L. Davidson Logic of Definition vi. 145 With Plato, the Idea is ontological or metaphysical... It is both an objective intelligible existence (‘uncreated and imperishable’) and a pattern, model, archetype or παράδειγμα.
1920 C. C. J. Webb Divine Personality & Human Life x. 263 The interpretation of the Platonic Ideas as the thoughts of God, which commended itself to Augustine.
1953 M. Kline Math. in Western Culture iii. 32 Whereas our senses grasp the passing and the concrete, only the mind can attain the contemplation of these eternal ideas.
1987 F. Meltzer Salome & Dance of Writing Introd. 7 A carpenter who makes a bed is imitating the idea of a bed, but the artist who paints an imitation of the carpenter's bed is thrice removed from the truth.
2004 A. Kenny New Hist. Western Philos. I. i. 50 My subjective concept of the circle—my understanding of what ‘circle’ means—is not the same as the Idea of the circle, because the Idea is an objective reality that is not the property of any individual mind.
b. In Kantian thought: an a priori concept of reason denoting an object beyond the bounds of possible experience or empirical knowledge (e.g., the soul, the world, God), esp. as distinguished from the categories of the understanding (see category n. 1b); an object corresponding to such a concept.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > philosophy > absolute idealism > [noun] > transcendentalism > elements of Kant's transcendental philosophy
reason1795
noumenon1796
thing in itself1798
transcendent1825
idea1848
Ding an sich1858
Grenzbegriff1893
1797 in tr. J. S. Beck Princ. Crit. Philos. Pref. p. xiii I understand by an idea, a perfection, to which nothing can be given adequate in experience.
1848 Methodist Q. Rev. Apr. 257 The older Rationalists retain the tenets of natural religion, particularly the three ideas of Kant, namely, God, liberty, and immortality.
a1871 G. Grote Fragm. Ethical Subj. (1876) v. 138 This conception is what Kant would call an Idea—nothing precisely conformable to it, in its full extent, can ever exist in reality.
1889 E. Caird Crit. Philos. Imanuel Kant II. xiv. 131 The great aim of Criticism..is to prevent us from mistaking this idea, which is merely a principle for the organisation of experience, for an actual object beyond experience.
1906 Jrnl. Philos., Psychol. & Sci. Methods 3 497 The third Kantian idea, that of ‘freedom’, he [sc. Plato] never discussed in the modern sense of the problem.
1948 H. J. Paton Categorical Imperative 239 Understanding..is closely bound up with sense and is directed to the knowing of sensible objects... Reason..by means of its Ideas..goes far beyond anything which sensibility can offer it as an object.
1996 A. van den Hoven tr. B. Lévy in tr. J.-P. Sartre & B. Lévy Hope Now 113 The Kantian Idea..expresses the Unconditioned, which is proper to reason.
c. In Hegelian thought: the absolute truth of which all phenomenal existence is the expression. Frequently in the Idea.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > philosophy > idealism > [noun] > Hegelianism > elements of
dialectic1797
idea1838
logic1838
Dasein1846
dialectics1851
Aufhebung1853
sublation1859
synthesis1896
1838 Penny Cycl. XII. 99/1 Hegel distinguishes three species of thought..1. The thought...2. The notion...3. The idea, or thought in its totality and fully determined.
1874 W. Wallace tr. G. W. F. Hegel Logic §213. 304 The Idea is truth in itself and for itself,—the absolute unity of the notion and objectivity.
1929 Philos. Rev. 38 352 The Hegelian pantheism of the Idea, panlogism, is the thesis.
1969 Jrnl. Hist. Ideas 30 86 To say that everything was as it is because it was the self-development of the Absolute Idea, was to say nothing at all.
1996 M. Hanna Mobilization Intellect iii. 91 For Imbart de la Tour, Hegel's philosophy of history, with its emphasis on the Idea as an indomitable force of development and progress, was both monocausal and mechanistic.
2. The conception of a standard or principle to be realized or aimed at; a conception of what is desirable or ought to be; a governing conception or principle; the plan or design according to which something is created or constructed.Now generally close to, or not readily distinguishable from, sense 4.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > perception or cognition > faculty of imagination > faculty of conceiving ideals > [noun] > idealized conception, ideal
ideaa1586
should-be1790
ideal1817
ideality1825
idealism1861
the mind > mental capacity > perception or cognition > faculty of imagination > inventive or creative faculty > [noun] > creative design or product
findalOE
ideaa1586
conception1587
creationa1616
birth1625
brainchild1631
constructurea1652
notion1742
construction1796
baby1890
the mind > will > intention > planning > [noun] > a plan > as something to be realized or aimed at
ideaa1586
a1586 Sir P. Sidney Apol. Poetrie (1595) sig. C2 The skil of the Artificer, standeth in that Idea or fore-conceite of the work.
1596 W. Warner Albions Eng. (rev. ed.) ix. lii. 237 Scriptures Idea, couched in our Loue to God and men.
1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost vii. 557 To behold this new created World..how good, how faire, Answering his great Idea . View more context for this quotation
1692 T. Taylor tr. G. Daniel Voy. World Cartesius iii. 237 He could not find Artists capable of accomplishing his Design and his Idea with that Exactness as was necessary.
1700 J. Dryden To Dutchess of Ormond in Fables sig. Av If Chaucer by the best Idea wrought.
1744 J. Harris Three Treat. iii. ii. 203 The true Idea of right Conduct..is not, merely To live consistently, but 'tis To live consistently with Nature.
1840 J. S. Mill Coleridge in Diss. & Disc. (1859) I. 438 His mode..is to investigate what he terms the Idea of it, or what in common parlance would be called the principle involved in it.
1841–8 F. Myers Catholic Thoughts II. iv. i. 182 The ground-plan of the Universe—the idea according to which it is.
1858 N. Hawthorne Fr. & Ital. Jrnls. II. 7 The statue has been restored, and..because the idea is perfect and indestructible, all these injuries do not..impair the effect.
1909 Science 23 July 111/2 The new psychiatric ward... The idea of non-restraint will be carried out as much as possible.
1928 Jrnl. Royal Instit. Internat. Affairs 7 357 The idea behind the Europasian movement is not new.
1958 D. Lewis Alan Davie [Exhib. catal.] 1 The action painter does not begin a canvas with a preconceived idea.
2005 J. Diamond Collapse (2006) ix. 303 Gradually, Japan independently of Germany developed the idea of plantation forestry: that trees should be viewed as a slow-growing crop.
3.
a. The conception of anything in its highest perfection or supreme development; a standard of perfection; an ideal. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > goodness and badness > quality of being good > perfection > [noun] > standard or type of
idea1586
quintessence1590
top1593
ideal1796
ideal case1813
beau-ideal1820
1586 T. Bowes in tr. P. de la Primaudaye French Acad. I. Ep. Ded. sig. *iij Rather an Idæa of good life, than such a platforme as may be drawne from contemplation into action.
1606 L. Bryskett Disc. Ciuill Life 61 Xenophon in his Ciropædia..hauing..vnder the person of Cirus, framed an idæa or perfect patterne of an excellent Prince.
1647 A. Cowley Not Fair in Mistress i I thought you once as fair, As women in th' Idæa are.
a1682 Sir T. Browne Christian Morals (1716) i. 33 How widely we are fallen from the pure Exemplar and Idea of our Nature.
1726 Bp. J. Butler 15 Serm. iii. 45 Add to these the superior faculty..and you compleat the Idea of Humane Nature.
1844 E. B. Barrett Drama of Exile in Poems I. 3 Thou [sc. Lucifer] shalt be an Idea to all souls..whence to mark despair, And measure out the distances from good.
1868 W. Collins Moonstone I. i. x. 137 The proper way to breed bulls was to look deep into your own mind, evolve out of it the idea of a perfect bull, and produce him.
1891 R. Hovey Launcelot & Guenevere (heading) The Galahad, or masculine idea of purity.
b. A person or thing regarded as perfect in its kind; the ideal realized in an individual. Obsolete.Cf. sense 13.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > goodness and badness > quality of being good > perfection > [noun] > perfect person or thing > ideal
idea1590
ideal1623
idealty1635
ideality1860
1590 R. Greene Neuer too Late i. 12 I questioned him of the order of his life, who answered me with such curtesie and humilitie as I perceiued in his words the perfit Idea of a mortified man.
1591 Troublesome Raigne Iohn ii. sig. D3v Was euer any so infortunate, The right Idea of a curssed man?
1601 P. Rosseter Bk. of Ayres ii. ii. sig. H It is th'Idæa of her sexe, Enuie of whome doth world perplexe.
1627 T. Jackson Treat. Catholike Faith 78 Christ,..was the Idea of legall Nazarites.
1651 J. Saint-Amard tr. F. Micanzio Life Father Paul sig. K2v The most excellent Senate (the very Idea of politique Christian prudence).
4. A conception or notion of something to be done or carried out; an intention, plan of action.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > will > intention > [noun] > intention or purpose
willeOE
highOE
thoughtOE
intent?c1225
achesounc1230
attenta1250
couragec1320
devicec1320
minda1325
studya1382
understanding1382
suggestionc1390
meaninga1393
i-minda1400
minta1400
tent1399
castc1400
ettlingc1400
affecta1425
advicec1425
intention1430
purposec1430
proposea1450
intendment1450
supposing?c1450
pretensionc1456
intellectionc1460
zeal1492
hest?a1513
minting?a1513
institute?1520
intendingc1525
mindfulness1530
cogitationa1538
fordrift1549
forecast1549
designing1566
tention1587
levela1591
intendiment1595
design1597
suppose1597
aim1598
regarda1616
idea1617
contemplationa1631
speculation1631
view1634
way of thinking1650
designation1658
tend1663
would1753
predetermination1764
will to art1920
1617 F. Moryson Itinerary ii. 245 You had alwaies in your owne judgement the certaine Idea thereof, as a thing that you resolved to doe.
1644 J. Milton Of Educ. 1 That voluntary Idea, which hath long in silence presented it self to me, of a better Education..then hath been yet in practice.
1770 E. Burke Let. 15 Aug. in Corr. (1960) II. 150 The Idea of short parliaments, is..plausible enough; so is the idea of an Election by Ballot.
1798 J. Root Rep. Superior Court & Supreme Court of Errors 1 44 If this performance meets with approbation..the author has it in idea to publish a second volume.
1842 F. Marryat Percival Keene I. xviii. 284 The idea came into my head, that I would singe the purser's wig.
1861 J. G. Holland Lessons in Life i. 12 We hear of women who are suddenly seized by an idea, as if it were a colic.
1911 H. P. Stevens & C. Beadle Rubber ii. 13 Sometimes the rubber plants are set amongst matured coffee or tea, with the idea of..gradually transforming a tea or coffee estate into a rubber estate.
1955 T. Williams Let. 12 June in Five O'Clock Angel (1991) 117 I do wish you would have the bedroom chaise covered for us, I like the green velvet idea.
1998 A. Taylor Suffocating Night xxxii. 215 As he lay there..an idea came to him... Suddenly he saw the way..to escape his immediate problems.
2005 N. Gershenfeld FAB 62 He wanted to test an idea he'd had for an invention but never been able to make.
5. A pattern, type; the original of which something else is a copy; a preliminary sketch or draft; something in an undeveloped state. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > relationship > imitation > prototype > [noun]
pattern1324
exemplara1382
examplec1425
mould1549
prototype1552
last1573
prototypon1586
precedent1597
archetype1605
protoplast1612
idea1648
protype1656
progenitor1790
roughout1913
the world > relative properties > relationship > imitation > prototype > [noun] > rough preliminary draft
scantling1567
rough-hew1641
idea1648
rough1699
roughout1905
1648 B. Gerbier Interpreter Acad. Forrain Langs. i. 174 A daughter had caused a basket with store of houshold things to be braught at her Tombe, about which basket in proces of time was grone Acante-leaves, which gaue to an Architectour the Idea to make the Corinthian head.
1669 T. Gale Court of Gentiles: Pt. I i. Introd. 1 Some rude Idea or first lines thereof were drawn many years past in mine Academic Studies.
1670 S. Wilson Lassels's Voy. Italy (new ed.) i. 188 This was the first Cupola in Europe; and therefore the more admirable for hauing no Idea after which it was framed.
1677 T. Gale Court of Gentiles: Pt. III iii. 127 Those Pagan, Jewish, and Gnostic Antichrists..as forerunners and ideas of the great Roman Antichrist.
1692 J. Ray Dissol. World (1732) iv. 57 Those Ideas or Embryos may be..marred or deformed in the womb.
1716 W. Wishart Theologia (1787) xii. 421 He is the unchangeable archetype and idea of all true things without himself.
1798 A. F. M. Willich Elements Crit. Philos. 39 A bare idea of a possible science, which is no where given in concreto.
6. Music. A musical theme, phrase, or figure as conceived or sketched before being worked up in a composition.
ΚΠ
1771 Philos. Trans. 1770 (Royal Soc.) 60 59 He was often visited with musical ideas, to which, even in the midst of the night, he would give utterance on his harpsichord.
1845 E. Holmes Life Mozart 253 The bravura passages should subserve good musical ideas.
1880 G. Grove Dict. Music I. 165 [Beethoven's] sketch-books of that time are crammed with ideas.
1944 D. Tovey Chamber Music i. 2 Beethoven's sketches for this opusculum are entangled with ideas of a fugal opening which afterwards took shape in the scherzo of the Ninth Symphony.
1963 A. Baraka Blues People ix. 139 Jazz..had already developed further, aided by the architectonic and technical ideas of ragtime, into a more completely autonomous music.
1971 B. Sidran Black Talk v. 136 They felt Coleman did not know how to play his horn because it sounded as if he rarely played to the same musical idea twice.
1987 R. S. Brindle New Music (ed. 2) ix. 81 Except for the occasional quotation of prearranged musical ideas, players extemporize in a very free manner.
2005 New Yorker 19 Sept. 91/2 He always carried a pad and a pencil in his coat pocket to catch the fleeting musical ideas he called ‘jots’.
II. Senses denoting a perceptible form or figure.
7. A representation, likeness, image, symbol (of something). Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > representation > [noun] > a representation
form?c1225
figurea1340
likeness1340
print1340
nebshaftc1350
resemblancea1393
visagea1400
similitude?a1425
representationc1450
simulacre1483
representa1500
semblance1513
idea1531
image1531
similitudeness1547
type1559
living image1565
portrait1567
counter-figure1573
shadow1580
countershape1587
umbrage1604
medal1608
reflex1608
remonstrance1640
transcript1646
configurationa1676
phantom1690
facsimile1801
personation1851
featuring1864
zoomorph1883
1531 T. Elyot Bk. named Gouernour i. xxii. sig. Liii I haue..noted daunsinge to be of an excellent utilitie, comprehendinge in it wonderfull figures, or, as the grekes do calle them, Ideae, of vertues and noble qualities.
1597 W. Shakespeare Richard III iii. vii. 13 I did inferre your lineaments, Beyng the right Idea of your father, Both in your forme and noblenesse of minde. View more context for this quotation
1601 B. Jonson Every Man in his Humor i. ii. sig. C Let the Idea of what you are, be portraied in your aspect. View more context for this quotation
1651 J. French Art Distillation To Rdr. sig. *3 The Idea of a plant [may be made] to appear in a glasse, as if the very plant it selfe were there.
1707 tr. P. Le Lorrain de Vallemont Curiosities in Husbandry & Gardening 325 When a Body is..reduc'd into Ashes, we find again in the Salts, extracted from its Ashes, the Idea, the Image, and the Phantom of the same Body.
1714 J. Swift Some Free Thoughts upon Present State Affairs (1741) 16 A Ship's Crew quarrelling in a Storm..is but a feint Idea of this fatal Infatuation.
8. An inherent form; configuration, shape. Also: a defining characteristic; aspect, nature, character. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > shape > [noun] > as an attribute
figure1471
fashion1577
idea1594
1594 T. Blundeville Exercises iii. i. ii. f. 135 The chiefe Idea or shape of Gods minde, which hath neither beginning nor ending, and therefore is compared to a Circle.
1653 H. More Antidote against Atheism in Coll. Philos. Writings (1712) ii. v. 54 Other solid Figures, which though they be not Regular, properly so called, yet have a settled Idea and Nature, as a Cone, Sphear, or Cylinder.
1677 T. Gale Court of Gentiles: Pt. III iii. 26 To demonstrate the vanitie of Philosophie from its own essential Idea or Nature.
1737 S. Berington Mem. G. di Lucca 211 To return to the Idea of their Government, each Father of a Family governs all his Descendants.
1799 R. Kirwan Geol. Ess. v. 156 In common language, mountains are distinguished from hills only by annexing to them the idea of a superior height.
9. A figure of speech or rhetoric; a form or way of speaking. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > literature > style of language or writing > figure of speech > [noun]
tropeOE
figurec1386
image1550
scheme1553
noema1555
rhetorical figure1565
idea1642
tropics1697
feint1730
arabesque1821
1642 J. Milton Apol. Smectymnuus 22 Whether a vehement vein throwing out indignation, or scorn upon an object that merits it, were among the aptest Ideas of speech to be allow'd.
III. Senses relating to the mind without necessarily implying an external manifestation.
10. The mental image or notion of something previously seen or known, recalled by the memory.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > memory > retention in the mind > image held in memory > [noun]
fantasyc1340
imagea1393
idea1579
phantasm1594
impression1613
tablature1661
memory-image1882
1579 T. North tr. D. Acciaiuoli in tr. Plutarch Liues 1132 Hamilcar..compelled Annibal being but a boy, to sweare..that he would be a mortal enemy to the Romanes... So, the remembrance of these things were still fresh in the young mans minde, as the Idea (or image) of his fathers hate.
1589 R. Greene Menaphon sig. D3v Me thinkes the Idea of her person represents it selfe an obiect to my fantasie.
1600 W. Shakespeare Much Ado about Nothing iv. i. 226 Th' Idæa [printed Th Idæa] of her life shall sweetly creepe, Into his study of imagination. View more context for this quotation
1662 J. Davies tr. A. Olearius Voy. & Trav. Ambassadors 220 After he had earnestly view'd the Boy, and by that means Imprinted an Idea of him in his imagination.
1749 H. Fielding Tom Jones V. xiii. xi. 91 Though I despaired of possessing you..I doated still on your charming Idea . View more context for this quotation
1764 S. Foote Mayor of Garret i. 19 Oh, madam, I can never be alone; your sweet idea [printed idera] will be my constant companion.
1803 W. Taylor in Monthly Mag. 14 487 I shut my eyes, and call up the idea of a sunshiny landscape.
1819 W. Scott Bride of Lammermoor ii, in Tales of my Landlord 3rd Ser. III. 15 The idea of her mother's presence seemed to have slipped from the unhappy girl's recollection.
1846 N. Hawthorne Mosses from Old Manse II. 123 The mention of those two policemen, and their custody of Bonaparte, had called up the idea of that odious wretch..who was pleased to take such gratuitous and impertinent care of my person, before I quitted New England.
1872 Pop. Sci. Monthly Oct. 674 It must indeed be some strong temptation that would induce one to defile one's hands by contact with a creature [sc. a house spider] the very idea of which suffices to inspire terror and disgust.
1918 W. Cather My Ántonia iv. iv. 363 The idea of you is a part of my mind; you influence my likes and dislikes, all my tastes, hundreds of times even when I don't realize it.
1945 E. P. Earnest Foreword to Lit. iv. 83 Walking upon the beach brings up the idea of mermaids.
1988 A. J. B. Kempers Kettledrums of Southeast Asia xiii. 234 The sculptor may have been inspired by the natural shape of a large stone that conjured up the idea of one of those subjects that fitted into his conceptual world.
2001 R. Angel Twice Removed 61 A bright horizon, the mere idea of you, so weirdly high upon the page.
11.
a. Usually with of: a picture or notion of something formed in the mind independently of direct memory; a conception.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > perception or cognition > faculty of ideation > idea, notion, or concept > [noun]
thoughtOE
thingOE
conceita1393
imagea1393
concept1479
conception1526
suppositiona1529
idee1542
idea1585
conceivement1599
project1600
representationa1602
notion1607
phantasma1620
conceptus1643
species1644
notice1654
revolution1675
representamen1677
vorstellung1807
brain-stuff1855
ideation1876
think1886
artefact1923
construct1933
mind1966
1585 R. Greene Planetomachia sig. G3 It is the Idea of her person, which by a secret imagination, is imprinted in thy minde, that hath pearced thy heart.
1612 J. Brinsley Ludus Lit. vii. 84 To haue an Idæa or generall notion of all in their heads.
1616 J. Bullokar Eng. Expositor Idea, the forme or figure of any thing conceiued in the minde.
1651 T. Hobbes Leviathan iv. xliv. 334 Men that are utterly deprived from their Nativity, of the light of the bodily Eye, have no Idea at all, of any such light.
1662 J. Davies tr. A. Olearius Voy. & Trav. J. Albert de Mandelslo 284 in Voy. & Trav. Ambassadors Of this place I had heard so much..that I had framed to my self a certain Idæa of its greatnesse.
1714 A. Pope Rape of Lock (new ed.) i. 6 Then gay Ideas crowd the vacant Brain, While Peers and Dukes, and all their sweeping Train..appear.
1759 S. Johnson Prince of Abissinia II. xlvii. 160 What space does the idea of a pyramid occupy more than the idea of a grain of corn?
1801 S. T. Coleridge Coll. Lett. (1956) II. 691 I have a sufficient Idea of Winter Cole so far as it enables me to distinguish it from Brocoli.
1857 F. D. Maurice Epist. St. John xv. 242 This is the completest idea of love, the only complete idea we can have.
1899 H. Van Dyke Fisherman's Luck 101 The matinée girl is not likely to have a very luminous or truthful idea of existence floating around in her pretty head.
1930 E. A. Rheinhardt Life E. Duse vii. 147 One can get an idea of how much she made the part her own by comparing accounts like the preceding with the original text.
1948 Mind 57 298 The idea of a mile or a day is an everyday idea.
1999 C. Mendelson Home Comforts i. 4/2 In one home, brows were raised and lips curled at the very idea of redeye gravy; in the other, at the very idea of garlic.
b. depreciative. A conception to which no reality corresponds; something merely imagined or fancied. Usually with modifying word, as mere.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > perception or cognition > faculty of ideation > faint, imperfect idea > [noun] > unfounded
fancy1471
idea1593
conception1614
figment1624
hypothesis1625
notional1653
unding1932
the mind > mental capacity > perception or cognition > faculty of imagination > mental image, idea, or fancy > [noun] > imaginary form, fiction
fantasy1362
figurec1384
feigning1388
idol1577
idea1593
nonentity1604
figment1624
spectre1708
1593 T. Lodge Phillis sig. E The vaine Idea of this dietie nust at the teate of thine Imagination: Was bred brought, vp by thine owne vanitie.
1598 W. Shakespeare Love's Labour's Lost iv. ii. 68 A foolish extrauagant spirit, full of formes, figures, shapes, obiectes, Ideas, aprehentions.
1622 G. Wither Faire-virtue sig. F7 Is it possible that I, Who scarce heard of Poesie; Should a meare Idea raise, To as true a pitch of praise, As the learned Poets could?
1630 W. Prynne Anti-Arminianisme 156 Which make..Predestination a meere Idæa.
1720 D. Waterland 8 Serm. Divinity of Christ 199 Not so destitute of..understanding, as to take the Substance of Father, or Son, to be an abstract Idea.
1765 Ld. Kames Elements Crit. (ed. 3) II. xxiv. 455 Number is not a real quality, but merely an idea [1762 (ed. 1) a conception] that arises upon viewing a plurality of things in succession.
1871 R. W. Dale Ten Commandm. i. 32 To the Jews, Jehovah was not a mere idea or a system of attributes.
1928 E. L. Schaub Philos. Today 116 Is Alma Mater a mere idea of fiction? Is it subjective?
1966 E. F. J. Payne tr. A. Schopenhauer World as Will & Representation I. 207 Both these are the case if it is mere ideas and fantasies that we allow to act on the will.
2003 B. Warner Hardcore Zen 133 Past and future are just ideas. When there is no past and no future, the question of life after death in any form including reincarnation becomes entirely irrelevant.
12.
a. More widely: any product of mental apprehension or activity, existing in the mind as an object of knowledge or thought; an item of knowledge or belief; a thought, a theory; a way of thinking.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > perception or cognition > faculty of ideation > idea, notion, or concept > [noun] > occupying the mind
thoughta1250
apprehension1579
intellection1579
reflect1594
notion1603
idea1633
reflection1648
presentment1817
earthly1897
1633 W. Lithgow Scotlands Welcome Prol. sig. *v O! thank mee, and be pleasd; whylst I avouch, The commoun sorrowes, of this groaning Land, Which I lay open, to thyne open hand: Then ponder, and peruse it, thou shalst fynd, The Sole Idea, of thy Countreyes Mynd.
1650 J. Howell Addit. Lett. xxvi. 42 in Epistolæ Ho-elianæ (ed. 2) One shall hardly find two in ten thousand that have exactly..the same tone of voice,..or idæas of mind.
1690 R. Boyle Christian Virtuoso i. 104 Either Congenite, or very easily and very early Acquir'd Notions and Idæas.
1726 J. Swift Cadenus & Vanessa 25 Ideas came into her Mind So fast, his Lessons lagg'd behind.
1742 S. Richardson Pamela (ed. 3) IV. lxi. 488 The antient Romans..would not assign Punishments to certain atrocious Crimes, because they had such a high Idea of human Nature, as to suppose it incapable of committing them.
1785 T. Reid Ess. Intellect. Powers 36 In popular language idea signifies the same thing as conception, apprehension, notion.
1810 B. V. Bowden in J. Bernstein Analyt. Engine (1964) ii. 30 Babbage was full of most ingenious ideas.
1822 W. Hazlitt Table-talk II. iv. 60 People who have no ideas of their own are glad to hear what any one else has to say.
1888 J. Inglis Tent Life Tigerland 245 The marvellous way in which Western ideas are making progress in the minds of the natives.
1922 J. Joyce Ulysses ii. 158 Why do they call that thing they gave me nutsteak? Nutarians. Fruitarians. To give you the idea you are eating rumpsteak.
1959 A. Bester Sci. Fiction Novel 104 The ideas of fourth dimension, time travel, outer space, microcosm and macrocosm, were fascinating.
1964 M. A. K. Halliday et al. Ling. Sci. 49 The Chinese script is not ideographic: the symbols do not represent ideas, they represent formal items of the language.
2004 E. Conlon Blue Blood v. 163 As we fused together as a team, our growing devotion to the idea of all-for-one, one-for-all did not always work to our practical advantage.
b. In the philosophy of Descartes, and esp. in the empiricist tradition of Locke, Berkeley, Hume, etc.: any of the contents of the mind, esp. those directly present to cognitive consciousness; anything a person thinks, feels, or imagines. Also: an immediate object of thought, perception, imagination, etc. Now chiefly historical as a philosophical term of art.In non-historical use now usually in association of ideas at association n. 7a.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > philosophy > philosophy of mind-body interrelation > [noun] > Cartesianism > elements of
idea1649
conarium1656
plenum1728
cogito1854
the mind > mental capacity > philosophy > epistemology > [noun] > cognition > Lockianism > elements of
idea1649
mode1671
reflection1690
presentmenta1842
presentation1849
infusion1857
1649 tr. R. Descartes Disc. Method v. 90 How light, sounds, smels, tasts, heat, and all other qualities of exteriour objects, might imprint severall Ideas [Fr. idées] by means of the senses.
1666 Philos. Trans. 1665–6 (Royal Soc.) 1 325 The Arguments devised against Atheists by Des Cartes, and drawn from the Idea's of our Mind.
1690 J. Locke Ess. Humane Understanding i. ii. 3 I must here in the Entrance beg Pardon..for the frequent use of the Word Idea... It being that Term, which, I think, serves best to stand for whatsoever is the Object of the Understanding when a Man thinks, I have used it to express..whatever it is, which the Mind can be employ'd about in thinking.
1709 G. Berkeley Ess. New Theory of Vision §45. 51 When I speak of Tangible Ideas, I take the Word Idea for any the immediate Object of Sense, or Understanding.
1725 I. Watts Logick i. iii. §1 There has been a great controversy about the origin of ideas, viz. Whether any of our ideas are innate or no, that is, born with us, and naturally belonging to our minds. Mr. Locke utterly denies it; others as positively affirm it.
1739 D. Hume Treat. Human Nature I. i. 12 By ideas I mean the faint images of these [impressions] in thinking and reasoning.
1762 Ld. Kames Elements Crit. III. App. 382 This indistinct secondary perception of an object, is termed an idea.
1839 H. Hallam Introd. Lit. Europe IV. iii. 275 The leading doctrine of Locke, as is well known, is the derivation of all our ideas from sensation and from reflection.
1843 J. S. Mill Syst. Logic II. iv. ii. §i The metaphysical inquiry into the nature and composition of what have been called Abstract Ideas.
1879 T. H. Huxley Hume iv. 90 Of the mechanism of this generation of images of impressions or ideas (in Hume's sense), which may be termed Ideation, we know nothing.
1967 Brit. Jrnl. Psychiatry 113 806/2 The ‘Identity Hypothesis’..seeks to relate phenomenal objects, i.e. ideas, sensations, sense-data, etc., to physical objects or entities which exist independently of experience..; mental events being no more than the epiphenomena of brain-events.
1971 J. Bennett Locke, Berkeley, Hume vi. 139 It is fundamental to his thought that Berkeley repeatedly explains ‘sensible things’ or ‘objects’ as things that can be perceived, and contends that nothing can be perceived except ideas.
2007 D. Allen & E. O. Springsted Philos. for Understanding Theol. (ed. 2) viii. 137 Locke shared with Descartes the belief that what we are directly aware of is ideas, and that some of them represent objects external to us.
c. A notion or thought that is more or less implausible, indefinite, or fanciful; a vague belief, opinion, or estimate; a supposition, impression, fancy.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > perception or cognition > faculty of imagination > fancy or fantastic notion > [noun]
phantoma1375
fantasyc1440
conceitc1450
fancy1471
crotchet1573
whim-wham1580
vision1592
reverie1602
whimsy1607
windmill1612
brainworm1617
maggota1625
vapour1631
flama1637
fantastic1641
idea1660
whim1697
rockstaff1729
whigmaleery1730
vagary1753
freak1785
whimsy-whamsy1807
crankum1822
whimmery1837
the mind > mental capacity > perception or cognition > faculty of ideation > faint, imperfect idea > [noun]
glimmeringc1380
glimpse1570
impression1613
sense1655
idea1712
conception1796
feeling1811
glimmer1837
a gleam (also glint, twinkle) in a person's eye1934
1660 J. Dauncey Hist. Charles II 195 Some ambitious spirits there were, and particularly Maj. General Lambert, whose high-flown thoughts made him fancy Idea's in his brain, and forc't him to attempt the enterprising to make him Commander of these three Nations.
1678 R. Cudworth True Intellect. Syst. Universe i. i. 29 The different Phancies in us, caused by the respective Differences of them..Which Phancies or Phantastick Idea's are [etc.].
1712 W. Rogers Cruising Voy. 338 To give them an ill Idea of all those they..call Hereticks.
1737 S. Berington Mem. G. di Lucca 62 The vast Ideas they had of their own Nation, valuing themselves above all other People.
1790 E. Burke Refl. Revol. in France 44 The very idea of the fabrication of a new government, is enough to fill us with disgust and horror. View more context for this quotation
1836 Franklin Repository (Chambersburg, Pa.) 4 Oct. 1/3 I've an idea, my man, that you are one of the wharf rats; and, if so, the less lip you give me the better.
1852 H. B. Stowe Uncle Tom's Cabin II. xxvi. 99 ‘You believe, don't you, that Topsy could become an angel..if she were a Christian?’ ‘Topsy! what a ridiculous idea!’
1861 C. Dickens Great Expectations I. xi. 170 So like Matthew! The idea!
1904 St. Nicholas July 819/1 The idea of a beggarly Yankee cod-hauler having mutton when his Majesty's officers are living on salt horse and pea-soup!
1932 E. Le Gallienne & F. Friebus Alice in Wonderland i. 73 [Queen] No, no! sentence first; verdict afterwards... [Alice] Stuff and nonsense! The idea of having the sentence first!
1953 R. Postgate Ledger is Kept (1958) 48 Was she having a baby? Could it be—what an idea!—Henry's? That stuffy, tetchy oppressed bachelor having fun with the skivvy in the back bedroom.
2004 M. Lanyado Presence of Therapist ii. vi. 91 He had an idea that when the train came to the end of the track, it risked ‘falling into the water’—which was why more track had to be added.
13. After a possessive and with of: a person's conception of an ideal, typical, or adequate example of the person or thing specified.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > kind or sort > individual character or quality > an individual case or instance > [noun] > typical or representative case > typical or representative thing or person > a person's conception of
idea1664
1664 H. More Modest Enq. Myst. Iniquity ii. xvii. 174 I think it very convenient, before I proceed to the Application of my Idea of Antichristianism, to make a more exquisite search into the Prophecies.
1742 H. Fielding Joseph Andrews I. i. x. 57 To indicate our Idea of a simple Fellow, That he is easily to be seen through: Nor do I believe it a more improper Denotation of a simple Book.
1753 T. Gray Let. in Wks. (1884) II. 234 I am surprised at the print, which far surpasses my idea of London graving.
1797 R. Clifford tr. A. Barruel Mem. Hist. Jacobinism I. xii. 194 Now..we are acquainted with Frederick's idea of a prince, The very reverse of being superstitious and who reads Voltaire's works as much as he is able.
1822 T. Mitchell in tr. Aristophanes Comedies II. Pref. p. vi A dramatic tetralogue, developing, in the author's peculiar manner, his idea of a people-king.
1869 G. Meredith Let. 19 Dec. (1970) I. 406 His idea of a profession is, he says modestly, that of Philologer.
1903 G. B. Shaw Man & Superman iii. 111 Is that your idea of a woman's mind? I call it cynical and disgusting materialism.
1919 E. O'Neill In Zone in Moon of Caribbees (1923) 22 If this is your idea of a joke I'll have to confess it's a bit too thick for me to enjoy.
1933 E. O'Neill Ah, Wilderness! i. 23 Gosh, he's always reading now. It's not my idea of having a good time in vacation.
1969 Listener 10 July 39/3 He would not be everyone's idea of a military dictator.
2002 D. Aitkenhead Promised Land iv. 42 My idea of beautiful is a big hairy lumberjack type, and fun is being tied up in a dungeon with a bottle of poppers duct-taped to my nose.

Phrases

P1. in idea: in conception or imagination; in mind, in thought, often as opposed to reality; †also with possessive adjective.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > perception or cognition > faculty of imagination > [adverb]
imaginativelyc1450
imaginarily1593
in idea1622
ideoplastically1922
the mind > mental capacity > perception or cognition > faculty of ideation > idea, notion, or concept > [adverb]
in idea1622
conceptively1659
conceptually1842
conceptualistically1872
1622 J. Mabbe tr. M. Alemán Rogue ii. i. i. 2 Albeit..I were such an arrant Asse and Coxe-combe, as you forsooth in your Idea would forme me to be [Sp. Aunque tan malo, qual tienes de mi formada idea, no puedo persuadirme que sea cierta].
a1637 B. Jonson Magnetick Lady Induct. 105 in Wks. (1640) III The Author..hath phant'sied to himselfe, in Idæa, this Magnetick Mistris.
1701 J. Norris Ess. Ideal World I. ii. 16 Men talk..of things in idea..a line in idea, a circle in idea.
1797 J. Sharp Life & Tragic Death F. G. Meyer. iii. 77 Murder..a crime that is so facilely associated with the occupation of a house-breaker, not only in idea, but frequently in fact.
1807 Ld. Byron Childish Recoll. 45 Bright in idea gleams thy lofty spire.
1830 Baroness Bunsen in A. J. C. Hare Life & Lett. Baroness Bunsen (1879) I. ix. 347 How many vignettes did I make in my idea for my intended letter?
1859 A. Bain Emotions & Will xiii. 229 We have been careful to note this character of continuance, or recoverability in idea, as belonging to each in a greater or less degree.
1907 F. Harrison Philos. Common Sense p. xxviii The synthesis is necessarily dual, or often trinal, in idea.
1957 N.Z. Listener 22 Nov. 4/2 We know what a ‘mere’..or a ‘hangi’ is, but they remain essentially Maori in idea.
2003 J. Milam in M. Hyde & J. Milam Women, Art, & Politics of Identity in 18th Cent. Europe vi. 129 Adélaïde would be placed in the center, framed by her older sisters, in fact or in idea.
P2. to have no idea: (a) colloquial to be unable to understand, imagine, or explain; often in phrase you have no idea; (b) (with that-clause) not to anticipate or expect (a situation or occurrence).
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > lack of understanding > fail to comprehend [verb (intransitive)]
uncomprehend1602
to have no idea1782
we had one but the wheel came off1937
you('ve) lost me1962
1782 F. Burney Cecilia II. iv. vi. 202 I assure you when I got home my feet were all blisters. You have no idea how they smarted.
1784 J. Badcock Let. 2 Feb. in Gentleman's Mag. Sept. (1789) 777/2 I had no idea that the few Remarks I made would have led me into so serious a controversy.
1816 J. Austen Emma I. iv. 62 I had no idea that he could be so very clownish, so totally without air.
1852 E. Ruskin Let. 17 Apr. in Effie in Venice (1965) ii. 298 In two days he got it done and they are grateful you have no idea.
1866 G. MacDonald Ann. Quiet Neighb. (1878) xxx. 523 I had no idea you would be flooded.
1916 ‘Taffrail’ Pincher Martin vii. 114 He's that conceited, you've no idea.
1949 M. Royden in A. H. Compton et al. Man's Destiny in Eternity iii. 51 They had no idea that future readers would suppose them to be writing an exact history.
1960 C. Day Lewis Buried Day v. 91 What caused this gun-shyness, I have no idea.
2004 K. Long Bad Mother's Handbk. (2005) iv. 89 You have no idea how long it's been going on! You miss what's right under your nose.
P3. colloquial.
a. to put ideas into (also in) a person's head (also to give a person ideas): to give a person notions of a particular kind, usually considered undesirable or harmful.
ΚΠ
1810 Lady's Monthly Museum Dec. 314 These hints naturally put ideas in the heads of the young people.
1840 J. R. Waddington Monk & Married Man II. xix. 300 Don't go and put any absurd ideas of prudence into Mr. Allison's head.
1854 P. B. St. John Arctic Crusoe xxii. 178 What is the use of putting ideas in the head of that poor savage?
1910 H. G. Wells Hist. Mr. Polly ix. 262 If I leave her a moment he's talking to her, teaching her words and giving her ideas!
1935 M. de la Roche Young Renny xiv. 123 Mary has washed this child's offering. It will put these new germy ideas in his head.
1959 Punch 8 Apr. 474/1 Of all the nannyisms that have constrained the English middle classes the most inhibiting has been that favourite injunction about not putting ideas into the child's head.
1989 T. Parker Place called Bird viii. 98 There's one or two folk..would have been wise if they'd followed his example and not started giving themselves fancy ideas.
2009 School Libr. Jrnl. (Nexis) 1 Feb. 18 I wouldn't put it past some enterprising rights holders to try to make folks buy one [sc. a licence]—so don't give them any ideas!
b. to get ideas (into one's head) (also to have ideas): to conceive notions of a particular kind, usually undesirable or harmful; spec. to entertain a notion or intention of being rebellious, violent, etc.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > perception or cognition > faculty of ideation > conceive, form in the mind [verb (transitive)] > take into the mind
conceive?a1425
to take (something) into (also in) one's head1570
attract1593
to get ideas (into one's head)1814
society > authority > lack of subjection > rebelliousness > rebel [verb (intransitive)] > entertain notions of rebellion
to get ideas (into one's head)1814
1814 Lady Morgan O'Donnel I. vi. 207 When the lower order of Irish are educated, and get ideas, and all that sort of thing, there is an end of the country.
c1848 F. A. Kemble Let. in Rec. Later Life (1882) III. 322 A young boy..brought up in a girl's convent, and taken out for a week, during which he..sups and gets tipsy at the mess, and, in short, ‘gets ideas’ of all sorts.
1932 H. C. Wyld Universal Dict. Eng. Lang. To get ideas into one's head, to cherish illusions.
1935 J. C. Squire Refl. & Mem. 10 Babus would get ideas into their heads, but the Mutiny had taught its lesson and the redcoat had the situation well in hand.
1941 I. Baird He rides Sky 146 That's the second happy couple I've seen busted up in a month and it's cured me if I ever had ideas. I'd no more marry with a war on than jump over the moon.
1955 W. C. Gault Ring around Rosa xiii. 156 Don't get any ideas, Callahan. This is an easy trigger.
1981 B. Ashley Dodgem vi. 134 If I tell you to put your arm round me an' act all lovey, just do it—an' don't get no ideas.
2005 Z. Smith On Beauty 151 Remember that time she took a class on a bench by the river? She get some crazy ideas sometimes. Is it an emergency?
P4. colloquial. that's the idea: used as confirmation or encouragement that someone has understood something or is doing something correctly.
ΚΠ
1837 Yale Lit. Mag. Oct. 29 What shall I write—philosophy—metaphysics—poetry? Ah! that's the idea.
1870 Our Boys & Girls 5 Feb. 85/2 ‘Run out into the lake, where you will get the full force of the wind.’ ‘That's the idea! I was just thinking of doing that.’
1913 L. F. Baum Patchwork Girl of Oz v. 336 That's the idea, Scraps... I'm glad to find you have decent brains.
1971 B. W. Aldiss Soldier Erect 125 ‘Hello, sweetheart. You like jig-jig?’ ‘That's the idea. Let's look at you first’... She said something... All we had in common was the word, the call-sign, ‘jig-jig’.
2007 D. Allosso Outside Box 148 ‘That's the idea. You're gettin' it,’ she said. ‘Yeah. My mom would die if she saw me,’ Reid answered.
P5. colloquial. it's (or that's) an idea, etc.: used to express approval of a suggestion as being worthy of consideration or capable of realization.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > belief > uncertainty, doubt, hesitation > possibility > [noun] > a possible thing or circumstance
possibilityc1460
perhapsa1535
potential1587
potentiality1587
maybe1598
contingencya1626
contingent1655
conceivable1659
possiblea1674
conceptiblea1676
cogitable1678
chance1778
it's an idea1841
may1849
might1850
thought1857
possibly1881
shot1923
1841 S. Warren Ten Thousand a-Year I. xii. 355 That's an idea !—I call that a decided idea, Gammon. 'Twould be the very thing !
1897 G. Gissing Whirlpool i. vi. 58 Honolulu—by Jove! it's an idea. I should like to see those islands myself.
1914 G. B. Shaw Misalliance 27 Thats an idea. Thats a new idea. I believe I ought to have made Johnny an author.
1942 A. Christie Body in Libr. i. 19 It might be. It's an idea, Jane.
1973 K. Giles File on Death i. 16 ‘I suppose I can take my Sergeant.’..‘It might be an idea... Your Sergeant might wheedle his way where Chief Inspectors fear to tread.’
2001 Independent 16 Jan. (Network Plus section) 7/8 ‘That's an idea! I shall be drinking myself to a standstill,’ she says hooting with laughter.
P6. colloquial (originally U.S.). big (also great) idea: a purpose, intention. Frequently in ironic phrase what's the big (also great) idea?
ΘΚΠ
the mind > will > intention > [noun] > intention or purpose > end, purpose, or object
willeOE
errand?c1225
purposec1300
endc1305
emprisec1330
intentc1340
use1340
conclusionc1374
studya1382
pointc1385
causec1386
gamea1393
term?c1400
businessc1405
finec1405
intentionc1410
object?a1425
obtent?a1475
drift1526
intend1526
respect1528
flight1530
finality?1541
stop1551
scope1559
butt?1571
bent1579
aiming point1587
pursuitc1592
aim1595
devotion1597
meaning1605
maina1610
attempt1610
design1615
purport1616
terminusa1617
intendment1635
pretence1649
ettle1790
big (also great) idea1846
objective1878
objective1882
the name of the game1910
the object of the exercise1958
thrust1968
1846 Independent Amer. & Gen. Advertiser (Platteville, Wisconsin Territory) 16 Jan. I've a big idea to gin you an account of some fun I had with an old bar, on the Missouri.
1908 G. H. Lorimer Jack Spurlock vii. 151 That's not the Big Idea, I know; it's the idiotic one, but the market for idiocy is unlimited.
1917 Black Cat June 7/1 ‘What's the great idea?’ insisted Peel. ‘You can't get rid of the stuff there!’
1928 Sat. Evening Post (N.Y.) 12 May 22/1 ‘Listen, big boy,’ he protested,..‘what's the big idea in this potato contest?’
1941 Weimar (Texas) Mercury 26 Dec. ‘What's the great idea?’ he snapped. ‘What do you think you are doing?’
1962 P. Gregory Like Tigress at Bay vii. 76 Jill entered, her face pale. ‘What was the big idea?’
2006 E. Giffin Baby Proof (2007) xiv. 158 ‘What's the big idea?’ I say, knowing exactly what his big idea is.

Compounds

C1. General attributive.
idea book n. [originally after German Ideen-Buch (1795 in the passage translated in quot. 1865)]
ΚΠ
1865 C. T. Brooks tr. J. P. F. Richter Hesperus II. xxxvi. 281 He must first get him a generalissimo who shall command and array this immeasurable, fluctuating host of ideas, a compositor who shall set up the idea-book [Ger. Ideen-Buch] from an unknown manuscript.
1965 Midwest Jrnl. Polit. Sci. 9 196 The author of the book does not report new empirical research on the issues he is raising. It is more an idea book.
2003 C. Edwards Beautiful Built-ins Introd. p. x It can be a great idea book for remodelers, interior designers, or homeowners.
idea-monger n.
ΚΠ
1728 Bp. P. Browne Procedure Human Understanding iii. vi. 438 The Mind having thus proceeded to the utmost Bounds of things merely Natural, let us stop a while here, to behold it at this Stage of its Progress; and to observe all our Idea-Mongers daily loading it with Fetters and Shackels.
1840 H. Reeve tr. A. de Tocqueville Democracy in Amer. III. i. xiv. 123 For some few great authors..you may reckon thousands of idea-mongers.
1923 Glasgow Herald 25 Jan. 4/2 Mr. Wells is a prolific idea-monger.
2004 P. Cafaro Thoreau's Living Ethics 192 Of course, Thoreau as idea-monger must entice people into listening to him.
idea politics n.
ΚΠ
1896 Daily News 26 Apr. 6/1 Mr. H...detests ‘idea’ politics and Republican ‘sentiments’ of every kind.
1995 L. A. Highleyman in N. Tucker Bisexual Polit. i. 74 The flip side of identity politics might be called idea politics.
idea pot n.
ΚΠ
1751 Let. 2 Mar. in Student 2 No. 8. 295 Going t'other day to the bookseller's with my idea-pot brim-full, and ready to run over, I stole up..into the Author's Coenaculum.
1796 Coleridge in J. Cottle Early Recoll. (1837) I. 171 No poor fellow's idea-pot ever bubbled up so vehemently with fears, doubts, and difficulties.
1840 Monthly Mag. July 56 And, thanks to my planets, fell plump on my head ; Souse came my idea-pot against a great stone.
1999 G. Morris Small Gardens iv. 37 A peek at the creativity others have poured into settings like yours will stir up the idea pot.
C2. Instrumental, as idea-intoxicated adj.
ΚΠ
1891 Pall Mall Gaz. 10 Oct. 2/3 In most art matters we are quite eighteen years behind our idea-intoxicated neighbours.
1997 L. A. Hoffman in C. Ochs et al. Paths of Faithfulness 60 European cafes were once packed with idea-intoxicated Jews who spoke only of Herzl, a Jewish state, and the like.
C3.
ideas man n. (also idea man) [compare French homme d'idée intellectual (1832), homme à idées creative, inventive, or ingenious man (1935)] a creative, inventive, or ingenious man, a man who comes up with ideas.
ΘΚΠ
the world > existence and causation > creation > [noun] > creative ability or power > creative person
ideas man1845
the mind > mental capacity > perception or cognition > faculty of imagination > inventive or creative faculty > [noun] > creator or inventor
craftsmana1382
feigner1382
finderc1384
finder-upc1425
engineer?a1513
finder-out1534
inventor1555
conceiver1581
conceiter1603
conceitist1628
commenter1645
ideas man1845
think-man1967
1845 Chambers's Edinb. Jrnl. 8 Nov. 289/2 The shoulder in connexion with the wheel is constantly in requisition among the idea men.
1890 Bucks County (Pa.) Gaz. 20 Mar. 1/4Idea men’ are regularly hired at handsome salaries nowadays by several different classes of employers.
1938 ‘E. Queen’ Four of Hearts (1939) i. 10 You're an idea man, and that's what they pay off on in Hollywood.
1940 Ann. Reg. 1939 363 Bryan Wallace was appointed Ideas Man to the Government.
1954 A. Koestler Invisible Writing xxxi. 333 He looked like the nonchalant impresario and idea-man of the great Comintern variety show.
1998 J. Barnes England, Eng. (1999) 29 From small beginnings, he has risen like a meteor to great things. Entrepreneur, innovator, ideas man, arts patron, inner-city revitaliser.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, November 2010; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

ideav.

Brit. /ʌɪˈdɪə/, U.S. /aɪˈdiə/
Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: idea n.
Etymology: < idea n. Compare earlier ideate v.
1. transitive. To give a particular form or character to. Cf. idea n. 8. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > shape > shape or give shape to [verb (transitive)] > an immaterial thing
shapea1300
model1605
idea1638
module1695
1638 David's Troubles Remembred iii. f. 19v She shines like to a Lilly white, In purest glasse, or as we see a Grace Idea'd sweetly in a Christall Case.
1649 J. Ellistone tr. J. Böhme Epist. vi. ii. 84 Hee doth Idea, forme, and shape, in the same Being the wonders of the expressed Word.
1649 J. Ellistone tr. J. Böhme Epist. vi. vi. 84 The humane Science..doth Idea, and shape it selfe both in good and evill, and maketh it selfe Essentiall therein.
1702 W. Freke New Jerusalem 22 When Christ is treated of, or idea'd in Allegory.
1746 T. Nugent tr. New Syst. Pref. p. xi An infinite and invisible Being, whose incomprehensible Majesty cannot be idea'd by any human Representation.
2. transitive. To form as an idea or concept; to plan, design. †Also with out. Now rare.
ΚΠ
1742 L. L. Let. 18 Sept. in Lett. Westm. Jrnl. (1747) 208 I..idea'd out to myself, that Mr Cock's great Auction Room was fill'd with a vast Number of People of different Rank, Quality and Humours.
1752 J. Sterling Ep. Hon. Arthur Dobbs iii. 81 Idea'd long, strait each Angelic Face I knew.
1774 W. Marshall Minutes Agric. 5 Dec. (1778) 71 A Surdraining Cart idea'd, and the wood-work finished.
1835 R. Mant Brit. Months in Sat. Mag. (1836) 6 Feb. 54/2 Who all this works with sovereign skill Idea'd in his perfect mind.
1933 Fresno (Calif.) Bee 17 Feb. a2/2 (advt.) Ideaed in Paris, made in America.
3. intransitive. To form ideas or notions. rare. In quots. as participial adjective and verbal noun respectively.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > perception or cognition > faculty of ideation > form conception [verb (intransitive)]
dreama1538
to conceive of1570
conceit1589
idea1844
ideate1862
1844 Fraser's Mag. Feb. 133 According to him [sc. V. Cousin], man should not be defined a reasoning, but an ideaing creature.
1963 E. Thompson T. S. Eliot ii. 34 Idea-ing (thinking is idea-ing for Eliot) therefore is an omnipresent accompaniment to feeling.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, November 2010; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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