hindsight
English
Etymology
From hind + sight, 19th c. Compare Latinate retrospect.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈhaɪn(d)saɪt/
Audio (Southern England) (file)
Noun
hindsight (countable and uncountable, plural hindsights)
- Realization or understanding of the significance and nature of events after they have occurred.
- You know what they say, hindsight is twenty-twenty.
- When you read "Seven Little Rabbits" at age 6 and read it again 15 years later, the hindsight you've developed in the time between will make you look at and think of the book very differently!
- 1961 March, “Talking of trains”, in Trains Illustrated, page 133:
- Hindsight is more easily acquired than foresight.
- (rare) The rear sight of a firearm.
Antonyms
Hypernyms
Translations
after-the-fact realisation or understanding
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rear sight of a firearm
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See also
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