Word for wise person who can see the big picture when others cannot










9














Bonus if this word talks about this person using this knowledge to guide others. But word without guidance in meaning can still be used in my sentence as an adjective.




The professor was ——- and used that to guide his students towards the right direction.











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  • 2




    Nothing wrong with "the professor could see the big picture". Also, the "towards" really wants to be an "in".
    – RegDwigнt
    Nov 9 at 22:29






  • 1




    The words "and used that" somewhat complicate the provision of an answer - some solutions sound a bit awkward with this construction.
    – Chappo
    Nov 9 at 23:49










  • "Wise" is a very good word.
    – Dan
    Nov 10 at 13:03










  • really, in "US Business talk" the exact phrased used is "a big picture person".
    – Fattie
    Nov 10 at 14:31










  • Sagacious would seem the obvious choice.
    – Phil Sweet
    Nov 10 at 20:56















9














Bonus if this word talks about this person using this knowledge to guide others. But word without guidance in meaning can still be used in my sentence as an adjective.




The professor was ——- and used that to guide his students towards the right direction.











share|improve this question



















  • 2




    Nothing wrong with "the professor could see the big picture". Also, the "towards" really wants to be an "in".
    – RegDwigнt
    Nov 9 at 22:29






  • 1




    The words "and used that" somewhat complicate the provision of an answer - some solutions sound a bit awkward with this construction.
    – Chappo
    Nov 9 at 23:49










  • "Wise" is a very good word.
    – Dan
    Nov 10 at 13:03










  • really, in "US Business talk" the exact phrased used is "a big picture person".
    – Fattie
    Nov 10 at 14:31










  • Sagacious would seem the obvious choice.
    – Phil Sweet
    Nov 10 at 20:56













9












9








9


1





Bonus if this word talks about this person using this knowledge to guide others. But word without guidance in meaning can still be used in my sentence as an adjective.




The professor was ——- and used that to guide his students towards the right direction.











share|improve this question















Bonus if this word talks about this person using this knowledge to guide others. But word without guidance in meaning can still be used in my sentence as an adjective.




The professor was ——- and used that to guide his students towards the right direction.








single-word-requests adjectives






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share|improve this question








edited Nov 9 at 22:23









sumelic

45.8k8108211




45.8k8108211










asked Nov 9 at 21:39









user323639

523




523







  • 2




    Nothing wrong with "the professor could see the big picture". Also, the "towards" really wants to be an "in".
    – RegDwigнt
    Nov 9 at 22:29






  • 1




    The words "and used that" somewhat complicate the provision of an answer - some solutions sound a bit awkward with this construction.
    – Chappo
    Nov 9 at 23:49










  • "Wise" is a very good word.
    – Dan
    Nov 10 at 13:03










  • really, in "US Business talk" the exact phrased used is "a big picture person".
    – Fattie
    Nov 10 at 14:31










  • Sagacious would seem the obvious choice.
    – Phil Sweet
    Nov 10 at 20:56












  • 2




    Nothing wrong with "the professor could see the big picture". Also, the "towards" really wants to be an "in".
    – RegDwigнt
    Nov 9 at 22:29






  • 1




    The words "and used that" somewhat complicate the provision of an answer - some solutions sound a bit awkward with this construction.
    – Chappo
    Nov 9 at 23:49










  • "Wise" is a very good word.
    – Dan
    Nov 10 at 13:03










  • really, in "US Business talk" the exact phrased used is "a big picture person".
    – Fattie
    Nov 10 at 14:31










  • Sagacious would seem the obvious choice.
    – Phil Sweet
    Nov 10 at 20:56







2




2




Nothing wrong with "the professor could see the big picture". Also, the "towards" really wants to be an "in".
– RegDwigнt
Nov 9 at 22:29




Nothing wrong with "the professor could see the big picture". Also, the "towards" really wants to be an "in".
– RegDwigнt
Nov 9 at 22:29




1




1




The words "and used that" somewhat complicate the provision of an answer - some solutions sound a bit awkward with this construction.
– Chappo
Nov 9 at 23:49




The words "and used that" somewhat complicate the provision of an answer - some solutions sound a bit awkward with this construction.
– Chappo
Nov 9 at 23:49












"Wise" is a very good word.
– Dan
Nov 10 at 13:03




"Wise" is a very good word.
– Dan
Nov 10 at 13:03












really, in "US Business talk" the exact phrased used is "a big picture person".
– Fattie
Nov 10 at 14:31




really, in "US Business talk" the exact phrased used is "a big picture person".
– Fattie
Nov 10 at 14:31












Sagacious would seem the obvious choice.
– Phil Sweet
Nov 10 at 20:56




Sagacious would seem the obvious choice.
– Phil Sweet
Nov 10 at 20:56










9 Answers
9






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16














The professor was visionary:




with the ability to imagine how a country, society, industry, etc. will develop in the future.




(Cambridge Dictionary)






share|improve this answer




















  • I'm not sure but I personally distinguish between "being able to envision a future" and "seeing the big picture [of a situation]", i.e. being able to spot patterns, being able to see things from a different perspective. I would for example say that Elon Musk is a visionary, but not far-sighted in that other sense. Is there such a distinction? To me, visionary is too close to dreamer/romancer.
    – marts
    Nov 10 at 19:40


















8














In British English the word is far-sighted.




far-sighted adjective UK ​ /ˌfɑːˈsaɪ.tɪd/ US ​ /ˌfɑːrˈsaɪ.t̬ɪd/



far-sighted adjective (WISE) ​



uk having good judgment about what will
be needed in the future and making wise decisions based on this:



Buying those shares was a very far-sighted move - they must be worth
ten times their original value now.



https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/far-sighted




However I believe that farsighted in American English may have a different meaning.



EDIT



Based on discussion in the comments below and thanks to the link provided by Chappo, I quote Merriam-Webster. However I also note that Timbo would assume hyperopia by default. I defer to native speakers of AmE in their knowledge of their own version of English.




farsighted adjective far·​sight·​ed | ˈfär-ˌsī-təd Definition of
farsighted 1a : seeing or able to see to a great distance b : having
or showing foresight or good judgment : SAGACIOUS 2 : affected with
hyperopia



https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/farsighted







share|improve this answer


















  • 1




    Why do you believe AmE is different? Did you check Merriam-Webster? The only difference is MW doesn't hyphenate it. You might like to edit your answer re AmE, as on this point it's currently misleading for future readers. Happy to upvote if edited, as "farsighted" was the first word that I thought of too :-)
    – Chappo
    Nov 9 at 23:41











  • @Chappo 2: affected with hyperopia. I guess this different meaning was meant.
    – Oleksandr Karaberov
    Nov 9 at 23:47







  • 1




    @OleksandrKaraberov not hyperopic; any native English speaker will instinctively choose the intended meaning. English abounds in metaphoric usages. If he was luminary, we don't assume he's "a body that gives light". If he was gifted, it wouldn't mean he'd been donated. In fact, the play on double meanings is an intrinsic element of much of our verbal humour.
    – Chappo
    Nov 9 at 23:54











  • @Chappo Thanks for a nice insight. Valid point. Not being a native speaker I miss sometimes this subtle ability to first recognise a metaphorical rather than literal meaning. But as for your other examples I'm not that slow-witted :)
    – Oleksandr Karaberov
    Nov 10 at 0:03










  • @Chappo Native AmE speaker here and I would absolutely assume hyperopia or at least sense 1a from MW, a non-metaphorical reference to the sense of sight. Without further context, I would assume an implication that the students were all nearsighted or blind.
    – Timbo
    Nov 10 at 2:57



















5














You can say that the professor was ‘luminary’ - a shining light that inspired or guided others, or illuminated their path.



Definition: ‘a person who inspires or influences others, especially one prominent in a particular sphere.
"one of the luminaries of child psychiatry"
synonyms: leading light, guiding light, inspiration, role model, hero, heroine, leader, expert, master; More’






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    4














    You can say the professor was far-seeing:




    Having shrewd judgement and an ability to predict and plan for future eventualities.




    This word is quite simple and yet has a connotation of acumen and shrewdness.






    share|improve this answer
















    • 4




      Far-sighted sounds better to me.
      – Lawrence
      Nov 9 at 23:30


















    3














    I went with:




    Sage: ​



    Wise, especially as a result of great experience.




    Which can be used as noun or adjective.



    "The professor was sage, and used that attribute to guide his students towards the right direction."



    Alternatively:



    "The professor was a sage, and guided his students in the right direction."






    share|improve this answer




























      3














      "See the big picture" is itself a little ambiguous.



      If you're thinking of seeing how all the parts fit together at a given point in time, consider astute, perceptive, observant, or insightful:



      astute (adj.) having or showing shrewdness and an ability to notice and understand things clearly



      perceptive (adj.) characterized by sympathetic understanding or insight



      observant (adj.) Keep, perceptive



      insightful (adj.) exhibiting or characterized by the power or act of seeing into a situation



      However, the student-teacher example makes me thing that you may be looking for an adjective that means the teacher can see how a situation may play out over time.



      In that case, consider perspicacious, far-sighted, or even plain-old wise:



      perspicacious (adj.) of acute mental vision or discernment



      far-sighted (adj.) having or showing foresight or good judgment : SAGACIOUS



      wise (adj.) characterized by wisdom : marked by deep understanding, keen discernment, and a capacity for sound judgment.



      (All definitions are from Merriam-Webster online: https://www.merriam-webster.com/)






      share|improve this answer




























        1














        To approximate the ability to see the big picture in a single word, we can perhaps use clear-sighted.




        The professor was clear-sighted and used that to guide his
        students towards the right direction.




        ODO:




        clear-sighted ADJECTIVE

        Thinking clearly and sensibly; perspicacious and discerning.



        ‘a clear-sighted sense of what is possible and appropriate’



        ‘What is needed is a clear-sighted reappraisal of where we stand,
        before we can plot a path forwards.’



        perspicacious ADJECTIVE

        Having a ready insight into and understanding of things.



        ‘If only our parents could have been perspicacious enough to see our
        talent and force us into showbiz.’



        discerning ADJECTIVE

        Having or showing good judgement.



        ‘Physicians are by inclination and training discerning men, wise in
        human relations and keen in judgement.’







        share|improve this answer




























          0














          Lofty, or Sublime. Expansive is close, with a strongly benevolent meaning. Something along those lines, lot's on this page here... --> https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/thesaurus/lofty






          share|improve this answer
















          • 1




            I don't think a professor would like to be called "lofty" as this suggests arrogance, and "sublime" is an excessive compliment and inappropriate to the context here.
            – Chappo
            Nov 10 at 4:57










          • He didn't ask what compliment would be well accepted by a professor, that's a different stackexchange.
            – Þorn
            Nov 10 at 7:30










          • Quite right. Nonetheless "lofty" is a poor answer, and "sublime" is simply wrong for "a wise person". That's just my opinion, of course, but there's a possibility others might agree with me. You might therefore consider editing your answer to provide evidence to support why you think each of your two words is correct - e.g. quoting from a dictionary. For further guidance, see How to Answer.
            – Chappo
            Nov 10 at 8:23



















          0














          I can't think of a single adjective, but "The professor didn't lose the forest in the trees" could be a useful idiom.






          share|improve this answer



















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            9 Answers
            9






            active

            oldest

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            9 Answers
            9






            active

            oldest

            votes









            active

            oldest

            votes






            active

            oldest

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            16














            The professor was visionary:




            with the ability to imagine how a country, society, industry, etc. will develop in the future.




            (Cambridge Dictionary)






            share|improve this answer




















            • I'm not sure but I personally distinguish between "being able to envision a future" and "seeing the big picture [of a situation]", i.e. being able to spot patterns, being able to see things from a different perspective. I would for example say that Elon Musk is a visionary, but not far-sighted in that other sense. Is there such a distinction? To me, visionary is too close to dreamer/romancer.
              – marts
              Nov 10 at 19:40















            16














            The professor was visionary:




            with the ability to imagine how a country, society, industry, etc. will develop in the future.




            (Cambridge Dictionary)






            share|improve this answer




















            • I'm not sure but I personally distinguish between "being able to envision a future" and "seeing the big picture [of a situation]", i.e. being able to spot patterns, being able to see things from a different perspective. I would for example say that Elon Musk is a visionary, but not far-sighted in that other sense. Is there such a distinction? To me, visionary is too close to dreamer/romancer.
              – marts
              Nov 10 at 19:40













            16












            16








            16






            The professor was visionary:




            with the ability to imagine how a country, society, industry, etc. will develop in the future.




            (Cambridge Dictionary)






            share|improve this answer












            The professor was visionary:




            with the ability to imagine how a country, society, industry, etc. will develop in the future.




            (Cambridge Dictionary)







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered Nov 9 at 21:42









            user240918

            24.7k1068148




            24.7k1068148











            • I'm not sure but I personally distinguish between "being able to envision a future" and "seeing the big picture [of a situation]", i.e. being able to spot patterns, being able to see things from a different perspective. I would for example say that Elon Musk is a visionary, but not far-sighted in that other sense. Is there such a distinction? To me, visionary is too close to dreamer/romancer.
              – marts
              Nov 10 at 19:40
















            • I'm not sure but I personally distinguish between "being able to envision a future" and "seeing the big picture [of a situation]", i.e. being able to spot patterns, being able to see things from a different perspective. I would for example say that Elon Musk is a visionary, but not far-sighted in that other sense. Is there such a distinction? To me, visionary is too close to dreamer/romancer.
              – marts
              Nov 10 at 19:40















            I'm not sure but I personally distinguish between "being able to envision a future" and "seeing the big picture [of a situation]", i.e. being able to spot patterns, being able to see things from a different perspective. I would for example say that Elon Musk is a visionary, but not far-sighted in that other sense. Is there such a distinction? To me, visionary is too close to dreamer/romancer.
            – marts
            Nov 10 at 19:40




            I'm not sure but I personally distinguish between "being able to envision a future" and "seeing the big picture [of a situation]", i.e. being able to spot patterns, being able to see things from a different perspective. I would for example say that Elon Musk is a visionary, but not far-sighted in that other sense. Is there such a distinction? To me, visionary is too close to dreamer/romancer.
            – marts
            Nov 10 at 19:40













            8














            In British English the word is far-sighted.




            far-sighted adjective UK ​ /ˌfɑːˈsaɪ.tɪd/ US ​ /ˌfɑːrˈsaɪ.t̬ɪd/



            far-sighted adjective (WISE) ​



            uk having good judgment about what will
            be needed in the future and making wise decisions based on this:



            Buying those shares was a very far-sighted move - they must be worth
            ten times their original value now.



            https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/far-sighted




            However I believe that farsighted in American English may have a different meaning.



            EDIT



            Based on discussion in the comments below and thanks to the link provided by Chappo, I quote Merriam-Webster. However I also note that Timbo would assume hyperopia by default. I defer to native speakers of AmE in their knowledge of their own version of English.




            farsighted adjective far·​sight·​ed | ˈfär-ˌsī-təd Definition of
            farsighted 1a : seeing or able to see to a great distance b : having
            or showing foresight or good judgment : SAGACIOUS 2 : affected with
            hyperopia



            https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/farsighted







            share|improve this answer


















            • 1




              Why do you believe AmE is different? Did you check Merriam-Webster? The only difference is MW doesn't hyphenate it. You might like to edit your answer re AmE, as on this point it's currently misleading for future readers. Happy to upvote if edited, as "farsighted" was the first word that I thought of too :-)
              – Chappo
              Nov 9 at 23:41











            • @Chappo 2: affected with hyperopia. I guess this different meaning was meant.
              – Oleksandr Karaberov
              Nov 9 at 23:47







            • 1




              @OleksandrKaraberov not hyperopic; any native English speaker will instinctively choose the intended meaning. English abounds in metaphoric usages. If he was luminary, we don't assume he's "a body that gives light". If he was gifted, it wouldn't mean he'd been donated. In fact, the play on double meanings is an intrinsic element of much of our verbal humour.
              – Chappo
              Nov 9 at 23:54











            • @Chappo Thanks for a nice insight. Valid point. Not being a native speaker I miss sometimes this subtle ability to first recognise a metaphorical rather than literal meaning. But as for your other examples I'm not that slow-witted :)
              – Oleksandr Karaberov
              Nov 10 at 0:03










            • @Chappo Native AmE speaker here and I would absolutely assume hyperopia or at least sense 1a from MW, a non-metaphorical reference to the sense of sight. Without further context, I would assume an implication that the students were all nearsighted or blind.
              – Timbo
              Nov 10 at 2:57
















            8














            In British English the word is far-sighted.




            far-sighted adjective UK ​ /ˌfɑːˈsaɪ.tɪd/ US ​ /ˌfɑːrˈsaɪ.t̬ɪd/



            far-sighted adjective (WISE) ​



            uk having good judgment about what will
            be needed in the future and making wise decisions based on this:



            Buying those shares was a very far-sighted move - they must be worth
            ten times their original value now.



            https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/far-sighted




            However I believe that farsighted in American English may have a different meaning.



            EDIT



            Based on discussion in the comments below and thanks to the link provided by Chappo, I quote Merriam-Webster. However I also note that Timbo would assume hyperopia by default. I defer to native speakers of AmE in their knowledge of their own version of English.




            farsighted adjective far·​sight·​ed | ˈfär-ˌsī-təd Definition of
            farsighted 1a : seeing or able to see to a great distance b : having
            or showing foresight or good judgment : SAGACIOUS 2 : affected with
            hyperopia



            https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/farsighted







            share|improve this answer


















            • 1




              Why do you believe AmE is different? Did you check Merriam-Webster? The only difference is MW doesn't hyphenate it. You might like to edit your answer re AmE, as on this point it's currently misleading for future readers. Happy to upvote if edited, as "farsighted" was the first word that I thought of too :-)
              – Chappo
              Nov 9 at 23:41











            • @Chappo 2: affected with hyperopia. I guess this different meaning was meant.
              – Oleksandr Karaberov
              Nov 9 at 23:47







            • 1




              @OleksandrKaraberov not hyperopic; any native English speaker will instinctively choose the intended meaning. English abounds in metaphoric usages. If he was luminary, we don't assume he's "a body that gives light". If he was gifted, it wouldn't mean he'd been donated. In fact, the play on double meanings is an intrinsic element of much of our verbal humour.
              – Chappo
              Nov 9 at 23:54











            • @Chappo Thanks for a nice insight. Valid point. Not being a native speaker I miss sometimes this subtle ability to first recognise a metaphorical rather than literal meaning. But as for your other examples I'm not that slow-witted :)
              – Oleksandr Karaberov
              Nov 10 at 0:03










            • @Chappo Native AmE speaker here and I would absolutely assume hyperopia or at least sense 1a from MW, a non-metaphorical reference to the sense of sight. Without further context, I would assume an implication that the students were all nearsighted or blind.
              – Timbo
              Nov 10 at 2:57














            8












            8








            8






            In British English the word is far-sighted.




            far-sighted adjective UK ​ /ˌfɑːˈsaɪ.tɪd/ US ​ /ˌfɑːrˈsaɪ.t̬ɪd/



            far-sighted adjective (WISE) ​



            uk having good judgment about what will
            be needed in the future and making wise decisions based on this:



            Buying those shares was a very far-sighted move - they must be worth
            ten times their original value now.



            https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/far-sighted




            However I believe that farsighted in American English may have a different meaning.



            EDIT



            Based on discussion in the comments below and thanks to the link provided by Chappo, I quote Merriam-Webster. However I also note that Timbo would assume hyperopia by default. I defer to native speakers of AmE in their knowledge of their own version of English.




            farsighted adjective far·​sight·​ed | ˈfär-ˌsī-təd Definition of
            farsighted 1a : seeing or able to see to a great distance b : having
            or showing foresight or good judgment : SAGACIOUS 2 : affected with
            hyperopia



            https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/farsighted







            share|improve this answer














            In British English the word is far-sighted.




            far-sighted adjective UK ​ /ˌfɑːˈsaɪ.tɪd/ US ​ /ˌfɑːrˈsaɪ.t̬ɪd/



            far-sighted adjective (WISE) ​



            uk having good judgment about what will
            be needed in the future and making wise decisions based on this:



            Buying those shares was a very far-sighted move - they must be worth
            ten times their original value now.



            https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/far-sighted




            However I believe that farsighted in American English may have a different meaning.



            EDIT



            Based on discussion in the comments below and thanks to the link provided by Chappo, I quote Merriam-Webster. However I also note that Timbo would assume hyperopia by default. I defer to native speakers of AmE in their knowledge of their own version of English.




            farsighted adjective far·​sight·​ed | ˈfär-ˌsī-təd Definition of
            farsighted 1a : seeing or able to see to a great distance b : having
            or showing foresight or good judgment : SAGACIOUS 2 : affected with
            hyperopia



            https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/farsighted








            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited Nov 10 at 11:14

























            answered Nov 9 at 23:27









            chasly from UK

            22.8k13068




            22.8k13068







            • 1




              Why do you believe AmE is different? Did you check Merriam-Webster? The only difference is MW doesn't hyphenate it. You might like to edit your answer re AmE, as on this point it's currently misleading for future readers. Happy to upvote if edited, as "farsighted" was the first word that I thought of too :-)
              – Chappo
              Nov 9 at 23:41











            • @Chappo 2: affected with hyperopia. I guess this different meaning was meant.
              – Oleksandr Karaberov
              Nov 9 at 23:47







            • 1




              @OleksandrKaraberov not hyperopic; any native English speaker will instinctively choose the intended meaning. English abounds in metaphoric usages. If he was luminary, we don't assume he's "a body that gives light". If he was gifted, it wouldn't mean he'd been donated. In fact, the play on double meanings is an intrinsic element of much of our verbal humour.
              – Chappo
              Nov 9 at 23:54











            • @Chappo Thanks for a nice insight. Valid point. Not being a native speaker I miss sometimes this subtle ability to first recognise a metaphorical rather than literal meaning. But as for your other examples I'm not that slow-witted :)
              – Oleksandr Karaberov
              Nov 10 at 0:03










            • @Chappo Native AmE speaker here and I would absolutely assume hyperopia or at least sense 1a from MW, a non-metaphorical reference to the sense of sight. Without further context, I would assume an implication that the students were all nearsighted or blind.
              – Timbo
              Nov 10 at 2:57













            • 1




              Why do you believe AmE is different? Did you check Merriam-Webster? The only difference is MW doesn't hyphenate it. You might like to edit your answer re AmE, as on this point it's currently misleading for future readers. Happy to upvote if edited, as "farsighted" was the first word that I thought of too :-)
              – Chappo
              Nov 9 at 23:41











            • @Chappo 2: affected with hyperopia. I guess this different meaning was meant.
              – Oleksandr Karaberov
              Nov 9 at 23:47







            • 1




              @OleksandrKaraberov not hyperopic; any native English speaker will instinctively choose the intended meaning. English abounds in metaphoric usages. If he was luminary, we don't assume he's "a body that gives light". If he was gifted, it wouldn't mean he'd been donated. In fact, the play on double meanings is an intrinsic element of much of our verbal humour.
              – Chappo
              Nov 9 at 23:54











            • @Chappo Thanks for a nice insight. Valid point. Not being a native speaker I miss sometimes this subtle ability to first recognise a metaphorical rather than literal meaning. But as for your other examples I'm not that slow-witted :)
              – Oleksandr Karaberov
              Nov 10 at 0:03










            • @Chappo Native AmE speaker here and I would absolutely assume hyperopia or at least sense 1a from MW, a non-metaphorical reference to the sense of sight. Without further context, I would assume an implication that the students were all nearsighted or blind.
              – Timbo
              Nov 10 at 2:57








            1




            1




            Why do you believe AmE is different? Did you check Merriam-Webster? The only difference is MW doesn't hyphenate it. You might like to edit your answer re AmE, as on this point it's currently misleading for future readers. Happy to upvote if edited, as "farsighted" was the first word that I thought of too :-)
            – Chappo
            Nov 9 at 23:41





            Why do you believe AmE is different? Did you check Merriam-Webster? The only difference is MW doesn't hyphenate it. You might like to edit your answer re AmE, as on this point it's currently misleading for future readers. Happy to upvote if edited, as "farsighted" was the first word that I thought of too :-)
            – Chappo
            Nov 9 at 23:41













            @Chappo 2: affected with hyperopia. I guess this different meaning was meant.
            – Oleksandr Karaberov
            Nov 9 at 23:47





            @Chappo 2: affected with hyperopia. I guess this different meaning was meant.
            – Oleksandr Karaberov
            Nov 9 at 23:47





            1




            1




            @OleksandrKaraberov not hyperopic; any native English speaker will instinctively choose the intended meaning. English abounds in metaphoric usages. If he was luminary, we don't assume he's "a body that gives light". If he was gifted, it wouldn't mean he'd been donated. In fact, the play on double meanings is an intrinsic element of much of our verbal humour.
            – Chappo
            Nov 9 at 23:54





            @OleksandrKaraberov not hyperopic; any native English speaker will instinctively choose the intended meaning. English abounds in metaphoric usages. If he was luminary, we don't assume he's "a body that gives light". If he was gifted, it wouldn't mean he'd been donated. In fact, the play on double meanings is an intrinsic element of much of our verbal humour.
            – Chappo
            Nov 9 at 23:54













            @Chappo Thanks for a nice insight. Valid point. Not being a native speaker I miss sometimes this subtle ability to first recognise a metaphorical rather than literal meaning. But as for your other examples I'm not that slow-witted :)
            – Oleksandr Karaberov
            Nov 10 at 0:03




            @Chappo Thanks for a nice insight. Valid point. Not being a native speaker I miss sometimes this subtle ability to first recognise a metaphorical rather than literal meaning. But as for your other examples I'm not that slow-witted :)
            – Oleksandr Karaberov
            Nov 10 at 0:03












            @Chappo Native AmE speaker here and I would absolutely assume hyperopia or at least sense 1a from MW, a non-metaphorical reference to the sense of sight. Without further context, I would assume an implication that the students were all nearsighted or blind.
            – Timbo
            Nov 10 at 2:57





            @Chappo Native AmE speaker here and I would absolutely assume hyperopia or at least sense 1a from MW, a non-metaphorical reference to the sense of sight. Without further context, I would assume an implication that the students were all nearsighted or blind.
            – Timbo
            Nov 10 at 2:57












            5














            You can say that the professor was ‘luminary’ - a shining light that inspired or guided others, or illuminated their path.



            Definition: ‘a person who inspires or influences others, especially one prominent in a particular sphere.
            "one of the luminaries of child psychiatry"
            synonyms: leading light, guiding light, inspiration, role model, hero, heroine, leader, expert, master; More’






            share|improve this answer

























              5














              You can say that the professor was ‘luminary’ - a shining light that inspired or guided others, or illuminated their path.



              Definition: ‘a person who inspires or influences others, especially one prominent in a particular sphere.
              "one of the luminaries of child psychiatry"
              synonyms: leading light, guiding light, inspiration, role model, hero, heroine, leader, expert, master; More’






              share|improve this answer























                5












                5








                5






                You can say that the professor was ‘luminary’ - a shining light that inspired or guided others, or illuminated their path.



                Definition: ‘a person who inspires or influences others, especially one prominent in a particular sphere.
                "one of the luminaries of child psychiatry"
                synonyms: leading light, guiding light, inspiration, role model, hero, heroine, leader, expert, master; More’






                share|improve this answer












                You can say that the professor was ‘luminary’ - a shining light that inspired or guided others, or illuminated their path.



                Definition: ‘a person who inspires or influences others, especially one prominent in a particular sphere.
                "one of the luminaries of child psychiatry"
                synonyms: leading light, guiding light, inspiration, role model, hero, heroine, leader, expert, master; More’







                share|improve this answer












                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer










                answered Nov 9 at 23:28









                Jelila

                2,7671314




                2,7671314





















                    4














                    You can say the professor was far-seeing:




                    Having shrewd judgement and an ability to predict and plan for future eventualities.




                    This word is quite simple and yet has a connotation of acumen and shrewdness.






                    share|improve this answer
















                    • 4




                      Far-sighted sounds better to me.
                      – Lawrence
                      Nov 9 at 23:30















                    4














                    You can say the professor was far-seeing:




                    Having shrewd judgement and an ability to predict and plan for future eventualities.




                    This word is quite simple and yet has a connotation of acumen and shrewdness.






                    share|improve this answer
















                    • 4




                      Far-sighted sounds better to me.
                      – Lawrence
                      Nov 9 at 23:30













                    4












                    4








                    4






                    You can say the professor was far-seeing:




                    Having shrewd judgement and an ability to predict and plan for future eventualities.




                    This word is quite simple and yet has a connotation of acumen and shrewdness.






                    share|improve this answer












                    You can say the professor was far-seeing:




                    Having shrewd judgement and an ability to predict and plan for future eventualities.




                    This word is quite simple and yet has a connotation of acumen and shrewdness.







                    share|improve this answer












                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer










                    answered Nov 9 at 23:08









                    Oleksandr Karaberov

                    1916




                    1916







                    • 4




                      Far-sighted sounds better to me.
                      – Lawrence
                      Nov 9 at 23:30












                    • 4




                      Far-sighted sounds better to me.
                      – Lawrence
                      Nov 9 at 23:30







                    4




                    4




                    Far-sighted sounds better to me.
                    – Lawrence
                    Nov 9 at 23:30




                    Far-sighted sounds better to me.
                    – Lawrence
                    Nov 9 at 23:30











                    3














                    I went with:




                    Sage: ​



                    Wise, especially as a result of great experience.




                    Which can be used as noun or adjective.



                    "The professor was sage, and used that attribute to guide his students towards the right direction."



                    Alternatively:



                    "The professor was a sage, and guided his students in the right direction."






                    share|improve this answer

























                      3














                      I went with:




                      Sage: ​



                      Wise, especially as a result of great experience.




                      Which can be used as noun or adjective.



                      "The professor was sage, and used that attribute to guide his students towards the right direction."



                      Alternatively:



                      "The professor was a sage, and guided his students in the right direction."






                      share|improve this answer























                        3












                        3








                        3






                        I went with:




                        Sage: ​



                        Wise, especially as a result of great experience.




                        Which can be used as noun or adjective.



                        "The professor was sage, and used that attribute to guide his students towards the right direction."



                        Alternatively:



                        "The professor was a sage, and guided his students in the right direction."






                        share|improve this answer












                        I went with:




                        Sage: ​



                        Wise, especially as a result of great experience.




                        Which can be used as noun or adjective.



                        "The professor was sage, and used that attribute to guide his students towards the right direction."



                        Alternatively:



                        "The professor was a sage, and guided his students in the right direction."







                        share|improve this answer












                        share|improve this answer



                        share|improve this answer










                        answered Nov 10 at 0:34









                        Lamar Latrell

                        1,8582822




                        1,8582822





















                            3














                            "See the big picture" is itself a little ambiguous.



                            If you're thinking of seeing how all the parts fit together at a given point in time, consider astute, perceptive, observant, or insightful:



                            astute (adj.) having or showing shrewdness and an ability to notice and understand things clearly



                            perceptive (adj.) characterized by sympathetic understanding or insight



                            observant (adj.) Keep, perceptive



                            insightful (adj.) exhibiting or characterized by the power or act of seeing into a situation



                            However, the student-teacher example makes me thing that you may be looking for an adjective that means the teacher can see how a situation may play out over time.



                            In that case, consider perspicacious, far-sighted, or even plain-old wise:



                            perspicacious (adj.) of acute mental vision or discernment



                            far-sighted (adj.) having or showing foresight or good judgment : SAGACIOUS



                            wise (adj.) characterized by wisdom : marked by deep understanding, keen discernment, and a capacity for sound judgment.



                            (All definitions are from Merriam-Webster online: https://www.merriam-webster.com/)






                            share|improve this answer

























                              3














                              "See the big picture" is itself a little ambiguous.



                              If you're thinking of seeing how all the parts fit together at a given point in time, consider astute, perceptive, observant, or insightful:



                              astute (adj.) having or showing shrewdness and an ability to notice and understand things clearly



                              perceptive (adj.) characterized by sympathetic understanding or insight



                              observant (adj.) Keep, perceptive



                              insightful (adj.) exhibiting or characterized by the power or act of seeing into a situation



                              However, the student-teacher example makes me thing that you may be looking for an adjective that means the teacher can see how a situation may play out over time.



                              In that case, consider perspicacious, far-sighted, or even plain-old wise:



                              perspicacious (adj.) of acute mental vision or discernment



                              far-sighted (adj.) having or showing foresight or good judgment : SAGACIOUS



                              wise (adj.) characterized by wisdom : marked by deep understanding, keen discernment, and a capacity for sound judgment.



                              (All definitions are from Merriam-Webster online: https://www.merriam-webster.com/)






                              share|improve this answer























                                3












                                3








                                3






                                "See the big picture" is itself a little ambiguous.



                                If you're thinking of seeing how all the parts fit together at a given point in time, consider astute, perceptive, observant, or insightful:



                                astute (adj.) having or showing shrewdness and an ability to notice and understand things clearly



                                perceptive (adj.) characterized by sympathetic understanding or insight



                                observant (adj.) Keep, perceptive



                                insightful (adj.) exhibiting or characterized by the power or act of seeing into a situation



                                However, the student-teacher example makes me thing that you may be looking for an adjective that means the teacher can see how a situation may play out over time.



                                In that case, consider perspicacious, far-sighted, or even plain-old wise:



                                perspicacious (adj.) of acute mental vision or discernment



                                far-sighted (adj.) having or showing foresight or good judgment : SAGACIOUS



                                wise (adj.) characterized by wisdom : marked by deep understanding, keen discernment, and a capacity for sound judgment.



                                (All definitions are from Merriam-Webster online: https://www.merriam-webster.com/)






                                share|improve this answer












                                "See the big picture" is itself a little ambiguous.



                                If you're thinking of seeing how all the parts fit together at a given point in time, consider astute, perceptive, observant, or insightful:



                                astute (adj.) having or showing shrewdness and an ability to notice and understand things clearly



                                perceptive (adj.) characterized by sympathetic understanding or insight



                                observant (adj.) Keep, perceptive



                                insightful (adj.) exhibiting or characterized by the power or act of seeing into a situation



                                However, the student-teacher example makes me thing that you may be looking for an adjective that means the teacher can see how a situation may play out over time.



                                In that case, consider perspicacious, far-sighted, or even plain-old wise:



                                perspicacious (adj.) of acute mental vision or discernment



                                far-sighted (adj.) having or showing foresight or good judgment : SAGACIOUS



                                wise (adj.) characterized by wisdom : marked by deep understanding, keen discernment, and a capacity for sound judgment.



                                (All definitions are from Merriam-Webster online: https://www.merriam-webster.com/)







                                share|improve this answer












                                share|improve this answer



                                share|improve this answer










                                answered Nov 10 at 19:14









                                Randall Stewart

                                1,449310




                                1,449310





















                                    1














                                    To approximate the ability to see the big picture in a single word, we can perhaps use clear-sighted.




                                    The professor was clear-sighted and used that to guide his
                                    students towards the right direction.




                                    ODO:




                                    clear-sighted ADJECTIVE

                                    Thinking clearly and sensibly; perspicacious and discerning.



                                    ‘a clear-sighted sense of what is possible and appropriate’



                                    ‘What is needed is a clear-sighted reappraisal of where we stand,
                                    before we can plot a path forwards.’



                                    perspicacious ADJECTIVE

                                    Having a ready insight into and understanding of things.



                                    ‘If only our parents could have been perspicacious enough to see our
                                    talent and force us into showbiz.’



                                    discerning ADJECTIVE

                                    Having or showing good judgement.



                                    ‘Physicians are by inclination and training discerning men, wise in
                                    human relations and keen in judgement.’







                                    share|improve this answer

























                                      1














                                      To approximate the ability to see the big picture in a single word, we can perhaps use clear-sighted.




                                      The professor was clear-sighted and used that to guide his
                                      students towards the right direction.




                                      ODO:




                                      clear-sighted ADJECTIVE

                                      Thinking clearly and sensibly; perspicacious and discerning.



                                      ‘a clear-sighted sense of what is possible and appropriate’



                                      ‘What is needed is a clear-sighted reappraisal of where we stand,
                                      before we can plot a path forwards.’



                                      perspicacious ADJECTIVE

                                      Having a ready insight into and understanding of things.



                                      ‘If only our parents could have been perspicacious enough to see our
                                      talent and force us into showbiz.’



                                      discerning ADJECTIVE

                                      Having or showing good judgement.



                                      ‘Physicians are by inclination and training discerning men, wise in
                                      human relations and keen in judgement.’







                                      share|improve this answer























                                        1












                                        1








                                        1






                                        To approximate the ability to see the big picture in a single word, we can perhaps use clear-sighted.




                                        The professor was clear-sighted and used that to guide his
                                        students towards the right direction.




                                        ODO:




                                        clear-sighted ADJECTIVE

                                        Thinking clearly and sensibly; perspicacious and discerning.



                                        ‘a clear-sighted sense of what is possible and appropriate’



                                        ‘What is needed is a clear-sighted reappraisal of where we stand,
                                        before we can plot a path forwards.’



                                        perspicacious ADJECTIVE

                                        Having a ready insight into and understanding of things.



                                        ‘If only our parents could have been perspicacious enough to see our
                                        talent and force us into showbiz.’



                                        discerning ADJECTIVE

                                        Having or showing good judgement.



                                        ‘Physicians are by inclination and training discerning men, wise in
                                        human relations and keen in judgement.’







                                        share|improve this answer












                                        To approximate the ability to see the big picture in a single word, we can perhaps use clear-sighted.




                                        The professor was clear-sighted and used that to guide his
                                        students towards the right direction.




                                        ODO:




                                        clear-sighted ADJECTIVE

                                        Thinking clearly and sensibly; perspicacious and discerning.



                                        ‘a clear-sighted sense of what is possible and appropriate’



                                        ‘What is needed is a clear-sighted reappraisal of where we stand,
                                        before we can plot a path forwards.’



                                        perspicacious ADJECTIVE

                                        Having a ready insight into and understanding of things.



                                        ‘If only our parents could have been perspicacious enough to see our
                                        talent and force us into showbiz.’



                                        discerning ADJECTIVE

                                        Having or showing good judgement.



                                        ‘Physicians are by inclination and training discerning men, wise in
                                        human relations and keen in judgement.’








                                        share|improve this answer












                                        share|improve this answer



                                        share|improve this answer










                                        answered Nov 10 at 17:47









                                        alwayslearning

                                        25.4k63692




                                        25.4k63692





















                                            0














                                            Lofty, or Sublime. Expansive is close, with a strongly benevolent meaning. Something along those lines, lot's on this page here... --> https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/thesaurus/lofty






                                            share|improve this answer
















                                            • 1




                                              I don't think a professor would like to be called "lofty" as this suggests arrogance, and "sublime" is an excessive compliment and inappropriate to the context here.
                                              – Chappo
                                              Nov 10 at 4:57










                                            • He didn't ask what compliment would be well accepted by a professor, that's a different stackexchange.
                                              – Þorn
                                              Nov 10 at 7:30










                                            • Quite right. Nonetheless "lofty" is a poor answer, and "sublime" is simply wrong for "a wise person". That's just my opinion, of course, but there's a possibility others might agree with me. You might therefore consider editing your answer to provide evidence to support why you think each of your two words is correct - e.g. quoting from a dictionary. For further guidance, see How to Answer.
                                              – Chappo
                                              Nov 10 at 8:23
















                                            0














                                            Lofty, or Sublime. Expansive is close, with a strongly benevolent meaning. Something along those lines, lot's on this page here... --> https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/thesaurus/lofty






                                            share|improve this answer
















                                            • 1




                                              I don't think a professor would like to be called "lofty" as this suggests arrogance, and "sublime" is an excessive compliment and inappropriate to the context here.
                                              – Chappo
                                              Nov 10 at 4:57










                                            • He didn't ask what compliment would be well accepted by a professor, that's a different stackexchange.
                                              – Þorn
                                              Nov 10 at 7:30










                                            • Quite right. Nonetheless "lofty" is a poor answer, and "sublime" is simply wrong for "a wise person". That's just my opinion, of course, but there's a possibility others might agree with me. You might therefore consider editing your answer to provide evidence to support why you think each of your two words is correct - e.g. quoting from a dictionary. For further guidance, see How to Answer.
                                              – Chappo
                                              Nov 10 at 8:23














                                            0












                                            0








                                            0






                                            Lofty, or Sublime. Expansive is close, with a strongly benevolent meaning. Something along those lines, lot's on this page here... --> https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/thesaurus/lofty






                                            share|improve this answer












                                            Lofty, or Sublime. Expansive is close, with a strongly benevolent meaning. Something along those lines, lot's on this page here... --> https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/thesaurus/lofty







                                            share|improve this answer












                                            share|improve this answer



                                            share|improve this answer










                                            answered Nov 10 at 3:08









                                            Þorn

                                            91




                                            91







                                            • 1




                                              I don't think a professor would like to be called "lofty" as this suggests arrogance, and "sublime" is an excessive compliment and inappropriate to the context here.
                                              – Chappo
                                              Nov 10 at 4:57










                                            • He didn't ask what compliment would be well accepted by a professor, that's a different stackexchange.
                                              – Þorn
                                              Nov 10 at 7:30










                                            • Quite right. Nonetheless "lofty" is a poor answer, and "sublime" is simply wrong for "a wise person". That's just my opinion, of course, but there's a possibility others might agree with me. You might therefore consider editing your answer to provide evidence to support why you think each of your two words is correct - e.g. quoting from a dictionary. For further guidance, see How to Answer.
                                              – Chappo
                                              Nov 10 at 8:23













                                            • 1




                                              I don't think a professor would like to be called "lofty" as this suggests arrogance, and "sublime" is an excessive compliment and inappropriate to the context here.
                                              – Chappo
                                              Nov 10 at 4:57










                                            • He didn't ask what compliment would be well accepted by a professor, that's a different stackexchange.
                                              – Þorn
                                              Nov 10 at 7:30










                                            • Quite right. Nonetheless "lofty" is a poor answer, and "sublime" is simply wrong for "a wise person". That's just my opinion, of course, but there's a possibility others might agree with me. You might therefore consider editing your answer to provide evidence to support why you think each of your two words is correct - e.g. quoting from a dictionary. For further guidance, see How to Answer.
                                              – Chappo
                                              Nov 10 at 8:23








                                            1




                                            1




                                            I don't think a professor would like to be called "lofty" as this suggests arrogance, and "sublime" is an excessive compliment and inappropriate to the context here.
                                            – Chappo
                                            Nov 10 at 4:57




                                            I don't think a professor would like to be called "lofty" as this suggests arrogance, and "sublime" is an excessive compliment and inappropriate to the context here.
                                            – Chappo
                                            Nov 10 at 4:57












                                            He didn't ask what compliment would be well accepted by a professor, that's a different stackexchange.
                                            – Þorn
                                            Nov 10 at 7:30




                                            He didn't ask what compliment would be well accepted by a professor, that's a different stackexchange.
                                            – Þorn
                                            Nov 10 at 7:30












                                            Quite right. Nonetheless "lofty" is a poor answer, and "sublime" is simply wrong for "a wise person". That's just my opinion, of course, but there's a possibility others might agree with me. You might therefore consider editing your answer to provide evidence to support why you think each of your two words is correct - e.g. quoting from a dictionary. For further guidance, see How to Answer.
                                            – Chappo
                                            Nov 10 at 8:23





                                            Quite right. Nonetheless "lofty" is a poor answer, and "sublime" is simply wrong for "a wise person". That's just my opinion, of course, but there's a possibility others might agree with me. You might therefore consider editing your answer to provide evidence to support why you think each of your two words is correct - e.g. quoting from a dictionary. For further guidance, see How to Answer.
                                            – Chappo
                                            Nov 10 at 8:23












                                            0














                                            I can't think of a single adjective, but "The professor didn't lose the forest in the trees" could be a useful idiom.






                                            share|improve this answer

























                                              0














                                              I can't think of a single adjective, but "The professor didn't lose the forest in the trees" could be a useful idiom.






                                              share|improve this answer























                                                0












                                                0








                                                0






                                                I can't think of a single adjective, but "The professor didn't lose the forest in the trees" could be a useful idiom.






                                                share|improve this answer












                                                I can't think of a single adjective, but "The professor didn't lose the forest in the trees" could be a useful idiom.







                                                share|improve this answer












                                                share|improve this answer



                                                share|improve this answer










                                                answered Nov 11 at 1:58









                                                tparker

                                                498514




                                                498514















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