What is another word for sightedness?

Pronunciation: [sˈa͡ɪtɪdnəs] (IPA)

Sightedness is a term used to describe the ability to see things clearly. There are several synonyms for sightedness, including visual acuity, eyesight, vision, and ocular perception. Each of these terms describes the ability to perceive visual stimuli, distinguish between different colors and shapes, and focus on objects at different distances. Another synonym for sightedness is visual function, which encompasses a person's entire visual system, including their eyes, brain, and nervous system. Other related terms include nearsightedness, farsightedness, and astigmatism, which all refer to specific visual conditions that can affect a person's sightedness. Regardless of which term is used, sightedness is a fundamental aspect of human perception and greatly impacts our daily lives.

Synonyms for Sightedness:

What are the hypernyms for Sightedness?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

What are the opposite words for sightedness?

Sightedness is the ability to see clearly, but there are some antonyms to that word. The first one is the word "blindness," which refers to the inability to see anything at all. Another antonym for sightedness is "obscured vision." This term describes a situation where a person's ability to see is inhibited by something, like darkness, fog, or an object blocking their view. A related term is "tunnel vision," which describes a condition where a person can only see objects or people in their immediate vicinity, but not those further away. A final antonym for sightedness is "impaired vision," which refers to a range of visual problems, including nearsightedness, farsightedness, and color blindness.

What are the antonyms for Sightedness?

Usage examples for Sightedness

Natural or artificial light and clear-sightedness are always detrimental to spiritual manifestations.
"Theological Essays"
Charles Bradlaugh
She trusted-as she knew she could trust-to her husband's sense of justice and quick-sightedness, even through any amount of cloudy exaggeration.
"Christian's Mistake"
Dinah Maria Mulock Craik
A gloomy silence reigned throughout the armament, except when it was broken by the voice of lamentation over fallen friends; and the interior of each ship presented a scene well calculated to prove the short-sightedness of human hope and human prudence.
"The Campaigns of the British Army at Washington and New Orleans 1814-1815"
G. R. Gleig

Famous quotes with Sightedness

  • In December 1941, when Australians began to sense that they were plunged into a new environment, the spectacles they had carried out from Britain were obsolete. They needed spectacles that would correct short-sightedness. They had to see the environment they were in as clearly as the environment they had left across the world.
    Geoffrey Blainey
  • For those unfamiliar with modern Indian history: the Marxists, already pushy for acquiring as much power in the institutions as they could grab, were handed a near-monopoly on institutional power in India's academic and educational sector by Indira Gandhi ca. 1970. Involved in an intra-Congress power struggle, she needed the help of the Left. Her confidants P.N. Haksar and Nurul Hasan packed the institutions with Marxists, card-carrying or otherwise. When, during the Emergency dictatorship (1975-77), her Communist Party allies threatened to become too powerful, she and her son Sanjay removed them from key political positions but, in a typical instance of politicians' short-sightedness, they left the Marxists? hold on the cultural sector intact. In the good old Soviet tradition, they at once set out to falsify history and propagate their own version through the official textbooks. After coming to power in 1998, the BJP-dominated government has made a half-hearted and not always very competent attempt to effect glasnost (openness, transparency) at least in the history textbooks. This led the Marxists to start a furious hate campaign against the so-called 'saffronization' of history.
    Koenraad Elst
  • Our country has been populated by pioneers, and therefore it has in it more energy, more enterprise, more expansive power than any other in the wide world. [...] They have shown the qualities of daring, endurance, and far-sightedness, of eager desire for victory and stubborn refusal to accept defeat, which go to make up the essential manliness of the American character. Above all, they have recognized in practical form the fundamental law of success in American life—the law of worthy work, the law of high, resolute endeavor. We have but little room among our people for the timid, the irresolute, and the idle; and it is no less true that there is scant room in the world at large for the nation with mighty thews that dares not to be great.
    Theodore Roosevelt
  • It is too easy to see Crowley as an overgrown juvenile delinquent with a passion for self-advertisement. But there another Crowley, the Crowley recognized and admired by Frank Bennett. Unless we understand this, we totally fail to grasp the extraordinary influence that Crowley could exert on women like Rose and Leah, and on men like Neuberg, Sullivan and Bennett. They came to believe that Crowley was exactly what he claimed to be: a great teacher, the messiah of a new age. And this was not the gullibility of born dupes; Sullivan, at least, was one of the most intelligent men of his age (as his book on Beethoven reveals). Crowley , in part, a great teacher, a man of profound insights. Mencius says: 'Those who follow the part of themselves that is great become great men; those who follow the part of themselves that is small will become small men.' But Crowley was a strange mixture who devoted about equal time to following both parts of himself, and so became a curious combination of greatness and smallness. A summary of his life, and his extraordinary goings-on, makes us aware of the smallness; but it would be sheer short-sightedness to overlook the element of greatness that so impressed Bennett.
    Aleister Crowley
  • Idiots. They were losing everything because of their short-sightedness. Maybe they deserved to lose it.
    Karl Schroeder

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