[ noun ] the visual percept of a region <noun.cognition> the most desirable feature of the park are the beautiful views
Vista \Vis"ta\, n.; pl. {Vistas}. [It., sight, view, fr. vedere, p. p. visto, veduto, to see, fr. L. videre, visum. See {View}, {Vision}.] A view; especially, a view through or between intervening objects, as trees; a view or prospect through an avenue, or the like; hence, the trees or other objects that form the avenue.
The finished garden to the view Its vistas opens, and its alleys green. --Thomson.
In the groves of their academy, at the end of every vista, you see nothing but the gallows. --Burke.
The shattered tower which now forms a vista from his window. --Sir W. Scott.
In the hierarchical sort with power concentrated at the top - General Motors is his example - the big office with breath-taking vista is usually the cannier option.
Usted no puede saber a simple vista si una persona estaa infectada.
Their grandmother is preoccupied with the vista outside the window, pristine soft snow and black rock, snow so deep it reaches the roofs of fishing cabins.
Still, Texas Air Corp.'s chairman, Frank Lorenzo, who is building a house on adjacent land, is said to be furious that the vista will be marred.
The vista from the Belmar boardwalk captures all the elements of a perfect summer's day.
But the vista from which an arrogant Fuchs once surveyed his competitors is now eroding.
Depending on the quantity of rain and the time of year, the river is navigable for 930 miles from Bhamo in the north to the delta, a 150-mile-wide vista of rice paddies.
Surely Ben Johnson's two paintings of European interiors, the great vista orf the Cini Foundation and the view of part of Chateau Margaux, would have raised the standard in the main painting gallery, Gallery III?
Unless local protest forces a climb-down, that idyllic vista will soon be interrupted by a chemical factory pumping 100,000 gallons of treated effluent into the Womanagh river every day, and by an incinerator chimney 80 feet high.