percept

名词 n. 动词 v.
/ˈpɜːsɛpt/    /ˈpɝsɛpt/

英文释义

名词 n.
  1. Something perceived; the object of perception. archaic
    — I shall, therefore, make no scruple in using the expression concept for the object of conception, and conception I shall exclusively employ to designate the act of conceiving. Whether it might not, in like manner, be proper to introduce the term percept for the object of perception, I shall not at present inquire.
  2. A perceived object as it exists in the mind of someone perceiving it; the mental impression that is the result of perceiving something.
    — I see an inkstand on the table: that is a percept. Moving my head, I get a different percept of the inkstand.
动词 v.
  1. Synonym of perceive. obsolete,rare,transitive
    — And is not the highest speculation of it percepted and perfected by manuall instruments, and those fallacious too, as themselves complain?
  2. To make perceptible or distinct, to reveal. transitive
    — The lighter and darker shading of surfaces can be understood as a means for discrimination in percepting each viewpoint, and at the same time as spatial articulation — back, forward, oblique — of the pictorial space of the picture-plane.

词形变化

percepts plural percepts present,singular,third-person percepting participle,present percepted participle,past percepted past

词汇关系

词源

词源 1
A learned borrowing, after concept, from Classical Latin perceptum (“a proposition, principle, general idea”), from the neuter of perceptus (“perceived”), the past participle of percipiō (“to perceive”); see perceive. Coined by the Scottish metaphysician Sir William Hamilton, 9th Baronet (1788–1856), in Lectures on Metaphysics and Logic, published posthumously in 1860 (see the quotation).
词源 2
Learned borrowing from Classical Latin percept-, the past participial stem of percipiō (“to perceive”). In sense 2, perhaps independently from percept (“something perceived”).
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