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Definition of Create mentally
1. Verb. Create mentally and abstractly rather than with one's hands.
Specialized synonyms: Draw, Make, Re-create, Give Birth, Schematize, Contrive, Devise, Excogitate, Forge, Formulate, Invent, Conceive, Conceptualise, Conceptualize, Gestate, Concoct, Dream Up, Hatch, Think Of, Think Up, Conceive Of, Envisage, Ideate, Imagine, Contrive, Design, Plan, Project, Design, Plan, Write, Develop, Evolve, Germinate, Program, Programme, Construct, Construct
Generic synonyms: Create, Make
Lexicographical Neighbors of Create Mentally
Literary usage of Create mentally
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Arena by Harry Houdini Collection (Library of Congress) (1895)
"Parents have it in their power to create healthful children ; to create mentally
able children ; to direct that ability practically as they wish; ..."
2. The Quimby Manuscripts: Showing the Discovery of Spiritual Healing and the by Phineas Parkhurst Quimby (1921)
"So when I had him asleep I would create mentally a lemon, and he would see it.
Then I would make him eat it till he would be so sick that he would vomit. ..."
3. The Quimby Manuscripts Showing the Discovery of Spiritual Healing and the by Phineas Parkhurst Quimby, Horatio Willis Dresser (1921)
"... he was very fond of lemons, and was always eating them. I thought I would
break him of it. So when I had him asleep I would create mentally a lemon, ..."
4. Publishers Weekly by Publishers' Board of Trade (U.S.), Book Trade Association of Philadelphia, American Book Trade Union, Am. Book Trade Association, R.R. Bowker Company (1904)
"... or beautifully varied" without something feminine in his nature, woman could
not "create mentally and vigorously" without something masculine in hers. ..."
5. The Principles of Psychology by William James (1918)
"... are not Only the abstract numbers themselves are unequivocal, only those which
we create mentally and hold fast to as ideal objects always the same. ..."
6. Thackeray by Gilbert Keith Chesterton (1903)
"His plan was to create mentally two or three of his chief characters and write
from page to page, with only a general notion of the ..."