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4 definitions found
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Vis·i·ble
a.
1.
Perceivable
by
the
eye
;
capable
of
being
seen
;
perceptible
;
in
view
;
as
,
a
visible
star
;
the
least
spot
is
visible
on
white
paper
.
Maker
of
heaven
and
earth
,
and
of
all
things
visible
and
invisible
.
--
Bk
.
of
Com
.
Prayer
.
Virtue
made
visible
in
outward
grace
.
--
Young
.
2.
Noticeable
;
apparent
;
open
;
conspicuous
.
The
factions
at
court
were
greater
,
or
more
visible
,
than
before
.
--
Clarendon
.
Visible church
Theol.
,
the
apparent
church
of
Christ
on
earth
;
the
whole
body
of
professed
believers
in
Christ
,
as
contradistinguished
from
the
invisible
,
or
real
,
church
,
consisting
of
sanctified
persons
.
Visible horizon
.
Same
as
Apparent horizon
,
under
Apparent
.
--
Vis*i*ble*ness
,
n.
--
Vis*i*bly
,
adv.
◄
►
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Ap·par·ent
a.
1.
Capable
of
being
seen
,
or
easily
seen
;
open
to
view
;
visible
to
the
eye
;
within
sight
or
view
.
The
moon
. . .
apparent
queen
.
--
Milton
.
2.
Clear
or
manifest
to
the
understanding
;
plain
;
evident
;
obvious
;
known
;
palpable
;
indubitable
.
It
is
apparent
foul
play
.
--
Shak
.
3.
Appearing
to
the
eye
or
mind
(
distinguished
from
,
but
not
necessarily
opposed
to
,
true
or
real
);
seeming
;
as
the
apparent
motion
or
diameter
of
the
sun
.
To
live
on
terms
of
civility
,
and
even
of
apparent
friendship
.
--
Macaulay
.
What
Berkeley
calls
visible
magnitude
was
by
astronomers
called
apparent
magnitude
.
--
Reid
.
Apparent horizon
,
the
circle
which
in
a
level
plain
bounds
our
view
,
and
is
formed
by
the
apparent
meeting
of
the
earth
and
heavens
,
as
distinguished
from
the
rational
horizon
.
Apparent time
.
See
Time
.
Heir apparent
Law
,
one
whose
to
an
estate
is
indefeasible
if
he
survives
the
ancestor
; --
in
distinction
from
presumptive
heir
.
See
Presumptive
.
Syn:
--
Visible
;
distinct
;
plain
;
obvious
;
clear
;
certain
;
evident
;
manifest
;
indubitable
;
notorious
.
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Ho·ri·zon
n.
1.
The
line
which
bounds
that
part
of
the
earth's
surface
visible
to
a
spectator
from
a
given
point
;
the
apparent
junction
of
the
earth
and
sky
.
And
when
the
morning
sun
shall
raise
his
car
Above
the
border
of
this
horizon
. --
Shak
.
All
the
horizon
round
Invested
with
bright
rays
. --
Milton
.
2.
Astron.
(a)
A
plane
passing
through
the
eye
of
the
spectator
and
at
right
angles
to
the
vertical
at
a
given
place
;
a
plane
tangent
to
the
earth's
surface
at
that
place
;
called
distinctively
the
sensible
horizon
.
(b)
A
plane
parallel
to
the
sensible
horizon
of
a
place
,
and
passing
through
the
earth's
center
; --
called
also
rational horizon
or
celestial horizon
.
(c)
Naut.
The
unbroken
line
separating
sky
and
water
,
as
seen
by
an
eye
at
a
given
elevation
,
no
land
being
visible
.
3.
Geol.
The
epoch
or
time
during
which
a
deposit
was
made
.
The
strata
all
over
the
earth
,
which
were
formed
at
the
same
time
,
are
said
to
belong
to
the
same
geological
horizon
.
--
Le
Conte
.
4.
Painting
The
chief
horizontal
line
in
a
picture
of
any
sort
,
which
determines
in
the
picture
the
height
of
the
eye
of
the
spectator
;
in
an
extended
landscape
,
the
representation
of
the
natural
horizon
corresponds
with
this
line
.
Apparent horizon
.
See
under
Apparent
.
Artificial horizon
,
a
level
mirror
,
as
the
surface
of
mercury
in
a
shallow
vessel
,
or
a
plane
reflector
adjusted
to
the
true
level
artificially
; --
used
chiefly
with
the
sextant
for
observing
the
double
altitude
of
a
celestial
body
.
Celestial horizon
.
Astron.
See
def
. 2,
above
.
Dip of the horizon
Astron.
,
the
vertical
angle
between
the
sensible
horizon
and
a
line
to
the
visible
horizon
,
the
latter
always
being
below
the
former
.
Rational horizon
,
and
Sensible horizon
.
Astron.
See
def
. 2,
above
.
Visible horizon
.
See
definitions
1
and
2,
above
.
◄
►
From:
WordNet (r) 2.0
apparent
horizon
n
:
the
line
at
which
the
sky
and
Earth
appear
to
meet
[
syn
:
horizon
,
visible horizon
,
sensible horizon
,
skyline
]
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