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Discover LudwigThe phrase "imagination space" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to refer to a conceptual area where creativity and ideas can be explored or developed.
Example: "In the imagination space of the artist's mind, vibrant colors and fantastical shapes come to life."
Alternatives: "creative realm" or "idea zone".
Exact(3)
I believe we should explore space, because in the human being's imagination, space is endless, and there is no need to fight against each other.
However, defining a protocol that is energy and performance efficient over the entire imagination space seems to be a nonimaginable task.
MJ: There's more imagination space in that one.
Similar(56)
A diabolic architectural analogue of Borges's universal library, the house perturbs the reader's imagination because space - the dispensation of walls and floors, the certainty of relative topography - is normally the one thing we can rely on absolutely.
"NASA has tried for years to recapture the public imagination about space and, to everyone's surprise, the public got caught up in the images from Hubble," Dr. Dressler said.
In 2004, Bigelow Enterprises sponsored a $50 million Space Prize but it failed to capture the imagination of space researchers and eventually folded.
Furthermore, the project has generated considerable publicity for the startup and captured the imagination of space enthusiasts, raising over $200,000 in just the first day, according to Fox News.
"Light is amazing, because with light you can work on imagination, on space, on feelings, and it opens a lot of doors for creation".
ESA, however, pulled off a sensational feat of engineering and captured the imagination of space-travel enthusiasts across the world when it launched Philae from its orbiting mothership Rosetta and landed it on the duck-shaped comet's surface on 12 November after a 10-year journey.
The famous speeches that once inspired a generation to get behind the moon launch and NASA's blasting our imaginations into space.
Dr. Tuttle had warned me of "extended nightmares" and "clock-true mind trips," "paralysis of the imagination," "perceived space-time anomalies," "dreams that feel like forays across the multiverse," and "trips to ulterior dimensions," et cetera.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com