perspective

perspective — noun

1. a way of understanding something that depends on the place, experience, or purpo

1.名詞C1
釋義

a way of understanding something that depends on the place, experience, or purpose you start from

例句

From a parent's perspective, the later school bus makes sense.

pattern: from someone's perspective

The film shows city life from a child's perspective.

同義詞
  • viewpoint

    very close in meaning and often used in discussion or debate

  • angle

    often suggests one side or aspect rather than the whole picture

  • outlook

    more often describes a general attitude than a specific starting point

文法句型

from someone's perspective

a new perspective on something

change someone's perspective on something

用法筆記

Common after from when naming the starting position, and after on when naming the subject. Distinguish from sense 7, which is about a scene you can physically see.

常見錯誤

We need a different perspective for this issue.
We need a different perspective on this issue.
💡Use on before the subject being considered.

2. a steady way of looking at problems so you do not treat them as bigger or more s

2.名詞C2
釋義

a steady way of looking at problems so you do not treat them as bigger or more serious than they are

例句

After the exam, Dad helped Mia keep the result in perspective.

fixed phrase: keep something in perspective

A week at the hospital gave Ben perspective on his small complaints.

同義詞
  • balance

    stresses emotional steadiness more than comparison

  • judgment

    is broader and can refer to decision-making in general

  • sense of proportion

    is the closest phrase when you mean not overreacting

反義詞
  • overreaction

    suggests responding as if something were more serious than it is

文法句型

keep something in perspective

lose perspective

regain perspective

用法筆記

Often used with keep, lose, regain, or bring back. Distinguish from sense 3: this sense is about staying calm and balanced, not about comparing one matter with larger ones.

常見錯誤

I lost my perspective for the bad grade.
I lost perspective after the bad grade.
💡In this sense, perspective often appears without an article in set phrases.

3. a clear sense of how important something really is after you compare it with oth

3.名詞C2
釋義

a clear sense of how important something really is after you compare it with other things

例句

The flood put our travel delay into perspective.

fixed phrase: put something into perspective

Reading refugee stories put our online argument into perspective.

同義詞
  • context

    stresses the larger setting around an issue

  • proportion

    focuses on correct relative importance

  • scale

    highlights size or significance in relation to something bigger

反義詞

文法句型

put something into perspective

bring something into perspective

gain perspective

用法筆記

Most often used in the pattern put something into perspective. Distinguish from sense 2: this sense comes from comparison, while sense 2 stresses calm, reasonable control.

常見錯誤

The trip put me in perspective.
The trip put my worries into perspective.
💡This pattern usually takes the problem or issue as the object.

4. the visual effect, or the drawing method behind it, that makes a flat picture sh

4.名詞
釋義

the visual effect, or the drawing method behind it, that makes a flat picture show distance and depth

例句

The art teacher used thin roads to create perspective.

create perspective in a drawing

Without perspective, the houses looked flat against the hill.

同義詞
反義詞
  • flatness

    describes a picture with no strong sense of depth

文法句型

create perspective

use perspective

learn perspective

用法筆記

Common in art classes and design talk, especially with words such as line, point, draw, create, and show. Distinguish from senses 5 and 6, which describe whether one part of a picture fits correctly.

常見錯誤

The drawing has no proportion.
The drawing has no perspective.
💡Proportion is about size relationship; perspective is about showing depth.

5. the condition in a picture where a person or object has the right size and posit

5.名詞
釋義

the condition in a picture where a person or object has the right size and position compared with the rest

例句

The front tree is in perspective, but the bridge is not.

fixed phrase: be in perspective

After one small change, the rider finally looked in perspective.

同義詞
反義詞

文法句型

be in perspective

look in perspective

用法筆記

Mostly appears after be, look, or stay rather than as a standalone noun. Distinguish from sense 4, which names the overall method of showing depth.

常見錯誤

The horse is on perspective.
The horse is in perspective.
💡The fixed phrase uses in.

6. the condition in a picture where one part is too large, too small, or badly plac

6.名詞
釋義

the condition in a picture where one part is too large, too small, or badly placed for everything around it

例句

The left arm is out of perspective in the final painting.

fixed phrase: be out of perspective

Because the window sits too high, the room looks out of perspective.

同義詞
  • distorted

    is broader and can describe any kind of visual wrongness

  • off-scale

    focuses especially on size not matching the rest

  • badly placed

    stresses position rather than size

反義詞

文法句型

be out of perspective

look out of perspective

seem out of perspective

用法筆記

Usually appears after be, look, seem, or feel in comments on drawings and paintings. Distinguish from sense 5, which describes the correct state.

常見錯誤

The window is off perspective.
The window is out of perspective.
💡The usual phrase is out of perspective.

7. a scene in front of you, especially one that stretches a long way into the dista

7.名詞
釋義

a scene in front of you, especially one that stretches a long way into the distance

例句

The doorway frames a long perspective of the garden path.

literary physical view

From the hilltop, there was a broad perspective of fields and sea.

同義詞
  • view

    the usual everyday word for what you can see

  • vista

    often suggests a wide and pleasing distant scene

  • panorama

    stresses a very wide scene, often seen from a high place

文法句型

a long perspective of something

a broad perspective of something

用法筆記

This physical sense is rarer and more literary than the mental sense in 1. In everyday speech, many speakers would use view or vista instead.

常見錯誤

I liked the perspective from the hotel room.
I liked the view from the hotel room.
💡For ordinary everyday description of scenery, view is usually more natural.

perspective — adjective