Mental rehearsal is also known as imagery or visualisation. It involves using all of the senses to create or recreate an event or image in the mind.
Non-Mental
Descriptive language, vivid imagery, and specific details can help the audience create a clearer mental image of the context or setting you are describing. Use sensory details, such as sights, sounds, smells, tastes, and textures, to engage the audience's imagination and immerse them in the scene. Be specific and paint a picture with your words to make the setting come alive for your audience.
Mental already is an adjective.
Sensory is using the five senses (Sight, Touch, Smell, Taste, Hear) to describe a feeling. Imagery is using words to describe a view.
an example of imagery is whatever that has to do with the formation of mental images
Some commonly used types include relaxation imagery, healing imagery, pain control imagery, and mental rehearsal.
Imagery
Some commonly used types include relaxation imagery, healing imagery, pain control imagery, and mental rehearsal.
Imagery
An audile is a person whose mental imagery consists of sounds.
Practice mental imagery. Imagine yourself triumphantly succeeding. Tell yourself, over and over again, that you have something important to share and that you will do a great job sharing it.
Michel Denis has written: 'Image et cognition' -- subject(s): Imagery (Psychology), Mental representation 'From mental imagery to spatial cognition and language' -- subject(s): Cognition, Imagery (Psychology), Language acquisition 'Image and cognition' -- subject(s): Cognitive psychology, Imagery (Psychology), Mental representation
Imagery isn't a "figure of speech" nor does it involve the *physical* senses literally. Imagery is created using descriptive words and phrases to evoke a "mental picture" of the scenes (not so much scenery, actual scenes) in a book. Definition from dictionary.com: Imagery: 1.the formation of mental images, figures, or likenesses of things, or of such images collectively: the dim imagery of a dream. 2.pictorial images. 3.the use of rhetorical images. 4.figurative description or illustration; rhetorical images collectively. 5.Psychology. mental images collectively, esp. those produced by the action of imagination. Try these resources: "What are mental images?" at http://www.gis.net/~tbirch/mi1.htm "Types of mental imagery" at http://www.gis.net/~tbirch/mi2.htm
The literary term is imagery. It involves using language to create mental images and sensory experiences for the reader.
Imagery creates vivid mental pictures for the reader, enhancing the style by making the writing more engaging and descriptive. It can also set the tone by evoking specific emotions or creating a certain atmosphere in the passage. By using effective imagery, the writer can shape the overall mood and impact of their writing.
Imagery is a writing tool. It is The formation of mental images. Books and stories would contain imagery, but movies are already visual do I wouldn't describe them as having imagery because they are already all images.