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Discover LudwigThe phrase "imagine vision" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English.
It is typically used to describe the act of envisioning or imagining a specific image or concept. Example: "As an artist, I often close my eyes and imagine visions of my next painting."
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As you can imagine, vision like that isn't such a terrible thing when you're a meal option for a host of predators.
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After we tuck the little ones into bed, we often stand and gaze at them sleeping and imagine visions of sugar plums dancing in their heads.
If you saw her walking down the street it would match your imagined vision.
But Texts for Nothing depends essentially on our imagined vision of a state of non-being.
The BBC has to cater to the audience it has, not to some imagined vision of Britain that lives on only in the Church's imagination.
It shows a tree backlit by the moon atop a little mound: an imagined vision of the scene of the weapons expert's death rather than a depiction (perhaps mercifully) of his suicide in 2003.
The first story in the book, "The Intoxicated," is about a 17-year-old girl who sobers up an inebriated partygoer with a coolly imagined vision of the end of civilization: "Maybe there'll be a law," she speculates, "not to live in houses, so then no one can hide from anyone else, you see".
And as well as attempting to come up with musical processes inspired by the matter-antimatter imbalance in the universe, with generative musical cells that Bowden describes as "the atoms of my piece", and with an imagined vision of Luca, our "Last Universal Common Ancestor", a term coined by biologist Adam Rutherford, there's a political dimension to A Violence of Gifts.
If nothing else, these Neo-Nazis and KKK members are at least forced to put a friendly face to an otherwise imagined vision of a biracial person.
The emergence of this new wave of visionary and futuristic communication [26] has provoked renewed interest in the role played by imagined visions of the future.
For as long as there's been techno, producers have pondered and imagined visions of the future.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com