the limits of what one wants to do or of what one is interested or involved in.
As your horizons expand, these new ideas can give a whole new meaning to life.
Experiencing other cultures helps to broaden our horizons.
You cannot close your eyes to new horizons.
His book must have lured innumerable Britons from their hearths in search of newhorizons.
Examples of 'horizons' in a sentence
horizons
I want to stay here but Aunt Dora thinks the time has come for us to broaden our horizons as well as our education.
Fraser, Christine Marion NOBLE BEGINNNINGS (2002)
Selina paced the room like a caged panther needing bigger horizons.
Robert Wilson BLOOD IS DIRT (2002)
She wanted the dusty boredom of the yellow horizons, the flat, hot landscape.
Fay Weldon THE PRESIDENT'S CHILD (2002)
All related terms of 'horizons'
celestial horizon
the apparent line that divides the earth and the sky
horizon
The horizon is the line in the far distance where the sky seems to meet the land or the sea .
sensible horizon
the apparent line that divides the earth and the sky
A horizon
the top layer of a soil profile , usually dark-coloured and containing humus and from which soluble salts may have been leached
B horizon
the layer of a soil profile immediately below the A horizon , containing deposits of leached material
C horizon
the layer of a soil profile immediately below the B horizon and above the bedrock , composed of weathered rock little affected by soil-forming processes
gyro horizon
→ artificial horizon
event horizon
the surface around a black hole enclosing the space from which electromagnetic radiation cannot escape due to gravitational attraction . For a non-rotating black hole, the radius is proportional to the mass of the black hole
visible horizon
the apparent line that divides the earth and the sky
apparent horizon
the apparent line that divides the earth and the sky
artificial horizon
an aircraft instrument, using a gyroscope , that indicates the aircraft's attitude in relation to the horizontal