derive
v.
extract, take from a source; obtain through reasoning
Derive
Dérive
In philosophy, a Dérive is a
French concept meaning an aimless walk, probably through city streets, that follows the whim of the moment. It is sometimes translated as a drift. French philosopher and
Situationist Guy Debord used this idea to try and convince readers to revisit the way they looked at urban spaces. Rather than being prisoners to their daily route and routine, living in a complex city but treading the same path every day, he urged people to follow their emotions and to look at urban situations in a radical new way. This led to the notion that most of our cities were so thoroughly unpleasant because they were designed in a way that either ignored their emotional impact on people, or indeed tried to control people through their very design. The basic premise of the idea is for people to explore their environment ("
psychogeography") without preconceptions, to understand their location, and therefore their existence.
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derive
Verb
1. reason by deduction; establish by deduction
(synonym) deduce, infer, deduct
(hypernym) reason, reason out, conclude
(hyponym) extrapolate
(derivation) derivation
(classification) logic, logical system, system of logic
2. obtain; "derive pleasure from one's garden"
(synonym) gain
(hypernym) obtain
(hyponym) reap, draw
3. come from; "The present name derives from an older form"
(hypernym) evolve
(verb-group) come, descend
(derivation) derivation
4. develop or evolve, especially from a latent or potential state
(synonym) educe
(hypernym) make, create
(hyponym) etymologize, etymologise
(derivation) derivation
5. come from; be connected by a relationship of blood, for example; "She was descended from an old Italian noble family"; "he comes from humble origins"
(synonym) come, descend
(verb-group) hail, come
(derivation) derivation
dérive (f)
n.
drift, drifting, driftage, leeway, fin
dérivé
adj.
derived (Grammar); deriving
dérivé (m)
n.
derivative, by product
dériver
v.
divert, deflect, derive, sidetrack, be adrift, shunt, drift
derivar
v.
derive; shunt, divert