Definition of creativities Creativities

We found 3 definitions of creativities from 2 different sources.

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What does creativities mean?

Wiktionary Wiktionary dictionary logo

  • creativities (Noun)
    Plural of creativity.

Part of speech

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WordNet

WordNet by Princeton University

Noun

Plural: creativities

creativity - the ability to create
  creativeness, creative thinking
  uncreativeness a lack of creativity
  creative, originative promoting construction or creation; "creative work"
  uncreative not creative; "an uncreative imagination"
  ability, power the quality of being able to perform; a quality that permits or facilitates achievement or accomplishment
  fruitfulness, fecundity the quality of something that causes or assists healthy growth
  flight a scheduled trip by plane between designated airports; "I took the noon flight to Chicago"
  wizardry, genius exceptional creative ability
  imaginativeness, imagination, vision the formation of a mental image of something that is not perceived as real and is not present to the senses; "popular imagination created a world of demons"; "imagination reveals what the world could be"
  excogitation, innovation, invention, conception, design thinking something out with care in order to achieve complete understanding of it
  inventiveness, ingeniousness, ingenuity, cleverness the power of creative imagination
= synonym
= antonym
= related word

Wiktionary Wiktionary dictionary logo

  • creativity (Noun)
    The quality or ability to create or invent something.

OmegaWiki DictionaryOmegaWiki Dictionary Ω

  • creativity
    The ability of a person to create or invent something.

Wikipedia Wiktionary dictionary logo

  • Creativity (or creativeness) is the ability of a person to be creative, take part in creating, or be useful in a creative network of other people. It is very difficult to measure, and some think it should not be measured. The reason is that creativity can not be defined - although several attempts have been made, a shared definition of the concept of creativity still comes up short.

    Some think creativity is an important thing that makes humans different from apes. Others recognize that even apes, other primates, other mammals and some birds adapt to survive by being creative (for example - primates using tools). Liane Gabora believes that all culture comes from creativity, not imitation. Therefore, these people say, human science should focus on it: Ethics for example would focus on finding creative solutions to ethical dilemmas. Politics would focus on the political virtues that need some creativity. Imitation would not be the focus of education. Linguistics might be more interested in how new words are created by culture, rather than in how existing ones are used in grammar.

    Intellectual interests (recognized as intellectual rights or intellectual property in the law) are a way to reward creativity in law, but they do not always work very well. A good example is copyright which is supposed to pay authors and artists, but may only pay lawyers to make (imitative) arguments in court.

    Creativity is a central question in economics, where it is known as ingenuity (the ability to

Part of speech

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Pronunciation

Word frequency

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Sign Language

creativities in sign language
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