Its actually a French expression - idee fixe which means a fixed idea, an obsession.
Its actually a French expression - idee fixe which means a fixed idea, an obsession.
No idea. I don;t even know what pumerical means!
Boston If you mean in real life, that is just an expression, and they can come from anywhere. But if you mean in a movie, I have no idea what your talking about.
Merger Doctrine
The expression "castles in the air" refers to having dreams or ambitions that are unlikely to happen or not based in reality. Mary Shelley may have used this expression to express the idea of having grand but unrealistic hopes or plans.
An idea comes up would be the normal expression.
I think you mean "cliché", and it means: A trite or overused expression or idea. An expression, idea, or element of an artistic work which has been overused to the point of losing its original meaning or effect. Like Miss America contestants saying that their greatest hope is for "world peace", or a football commentator saying of a team member: "He came to play!"
a unifying idea or an undercurrent of meaning that moves through a form of expression.
In the study of GWF Hegel, an absolute idea is the spiritual principle of which reality is the expression.
an artwork
This is usually called the expression of the idea. I can't protect my idea for a movie, but I can protect my script.
Replace each variable in the expression by its value and then find the value of the expression.