circa 1300, "something seen in the imagination or in the supernatural"
from Anglo-French visioun
Old French vision "presence, sight; view, look, appearance; dream, supernatural sight"
PIE root *weid- "to see"
"There is no easy way to describe her. Language has no word for such energies, but a lot about her dealt with lucidity of vision. Vision in the broader sense. Seeing without eyes, hearing without ears, perceiving and sensing through a greater sense of energy."
"Originals"
~☉~ | lucid definition; added layer of lucidity, or aethereal context |
⚜ | classic definition |
☣ | artificium definition; usually words which have undergone a warped evolution, or a complete perversion of the original sense |