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Realization   /rˈiləzˈeɪʃən/   Listen
Realization

noun
1.
Coming to understand something clearly and distinctly.  Synonyms: realisation, recognition.  "A sudden recognition of the problem he faced" , "Increasing recognition that diabetes frequently coexists with other chronic diseases"
2.
Making real or giving the appearance of reality.  Synonyms: actualisation, actualization, realisation.
3.
A musical composition that has been completed or enriched by someone other than the composer.  Synonym: realisation.
4.
A sale in order to obtain money (as a sale of stock or a sale of the estate of a bankrupt person) or the money so obtained.  Synonym: realisation.
5.
The completion or enrichment of a piece of music left sparsely notated by a composer.  Synonym: realisation.
6.
Something that is made real or concrete.  Synonyms: fruition, realisation.



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"Realization" Quotes from Famous Books



... wake of the boat, saw Ted's arm move slower and slower and suddenly a wave of realization of the other's danger came upon him. They might both be drowned,—two of them instead ...
— Ted and the Telephone • Sara Ware Bassett

... side as itself. This act is the condition of knowing of every kind, which always differentiates then identifies. One step more: Circe in her prophecy gave the pure form of the idea, then came its realization, so that there is suggested the primordial distinction of the mind into Intellect and Will, or the Thought and the Deed. Thus we see in this division of the Twelfth Book the exact characteristic of subject-object, and there is still further suggested the distinction ...
— Homer's Odyssey - A Commentary • Denton J. Snider

... with the comic quaintness of the director. There a little lady, new to the stage, is made to feel at home and confident. The proud old-timer is sufficiently ameliorated to approve of the change suggested. The leading lady trembles with the shock of realization imparted by the stout little man with chubby smile who, seated alone in the darkened auditorium, conveys his meaning as with invisible wires, quietly, quaintly, simply, and rationally, so as to stir the actors' souls to new sensibilities, awaken thought, and ...
— Charles Frohman: Manager and Man • Isaac Frederick Marcosson and Daniel Frohman

... her mother's shoulder, big-eyed, scarce believing the plainly written words she read. It was preposterous, ridiculous, fanciful, a dream from which she must awake in a moment to the full realization of their dreadful need of just such a godsend ...
— Nan Sherwood at Pine Camp - or, The Old Lumberman's Secret • Annie Roe Carr

... Jesus the sense of being God's child was normally human, and in his ministry he invited all men to a similar consciousness of sonship. Yet his early years must have brought to him a realization that he was different from his fellows. That in him which made a confession at the baptism unnatural and which led to John's word, "I have need to be baptized by thee," was ready to echo assent when God said, "Thou art my Son." He accepted the ...
— The Life of Jesus of Nazareth • Rush Rhees


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