bird's-eye view

Related to bird's-eye view: bird's foot trefoil

a bird's eye view

1. A view looking down at an object or area from a high elevation (as if from the perspective of a bird in flight). From up here you can get a bird's eye view of the entire campus.
2. A consideration of a problem or situation from a comprehensive perspective. In order to determine why the company was headed towards a fiscal disaster, the CFO had to take a step back and get a bird's eye view of the situation so he could locate the cause of the problem.
See also: eye, view
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

bird's-eye view

 
1. Lit. a view seen from high above. We got a bird's-eye view of Cleveland as the plane began its descent. From the top of the church tower you get a splendid bird's-eye view of the village.
2. Fig. a brief survey of something; a hasty look at something. The course provides a bird's-eye view of the works of Mozart, but it doesn't deal with them in enough detail for your purpose. All you need is a bird's-eye view of the events of World War II to pass the test.
See also: view
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs.

—'s-eye view

a view from the position or standpoint of the person or thing specified.
The most common versions of this phrase are bird's-eye view (see bird) and worm's-eye view (see worm).
1982 Ian Hamilton Robert Lowell There is a kind of double vision: the child's eye view judged and interpreted by the ironical narrator.
Farlex Partner Idioms Dictionary

bird's-eye view, a

An overall view, the large picture. The term dates from about 1600 and not only means “panoramic” but also may imply a somewhat superficial picture. Thus a “bird’s-eye view” of music history, for example, may try to cover five hundred years of musical composition in a one-semester course. A 1989 New York Times headline, “Human-Eye View,” announcing a special tour of a natural history museum’s ornithology collection, gave this cliché a new twist.
The Dictionary of Clichés by Christine Ammer
See also:
  • a bird's eye view
  • a bird's-eye view
  • bird's eye view
  • eye-view
  • bird's-eye view, a
  • in (someone's) view
  • in view
  • pan over
  • come into view
  • fade from view
References in periodicals archive
If you had to draw a bird's-eye view of your community, how would you orient the view?
Compare and contrast satellite photographs of the Earth to abstract artworks that represent bird's-eye view.
This year's Peter Rentschler Memorial Lecture was delivered by Rick Sommer, president/CEO of Citation Corp., a company with a bird's-eye view on change.
With a dynamic bird's-eye view not only of the Manhattan skyline but also of the construction project itself moving full speed ahead right in its front window, the sales office at Bridge Tower Place on the Upper East Side of Manhattan has officially opened for business.
Focusing on three of these prints in which a bird's-eye view of the city is framed with illustrations of the festivities, this essay explores relations between space, gender, allegory and costume as they were manifested in this rare female procession.
Scientists now have taken their own bird's-eye view at holograms for a slew of new uses--from images on credit cards and CD-ROMs to thwart counterfeiters, to medical image scans that recreate images of the human brain.
In Michigan's Upper Peninsula, a papermaker and an ecology firm are creating a bird's-eye view of ecosystem forestry.
Take to the skies for a bird's-eye view of the sun going down and the twinkling lights of London coming on as dusk falls.
The impressive artwork has been carved from the spoil of a former coal tip in the heart of the South Wales Valleys The production team from the BBC show launched a hot air balloon from the site on the weekend to get a bird's-eye view of the 200-metre long sculpture.
To create its bird's-eye view of the world, Earthflight uses a host of extraordinary filming techniques including filming "imprinted" flocks from microlights, wild flocks filmed from model gliders and silent drones, full-sized helicopter with stabilised mounts and cameras on the backs of trained birds.
From the orchard's hilltop, one has a bird's-eye view of the village's beauty.
Knowsley council has produced a new cycle map giving a bird's-eye view of the best cycle-friendly routes across the borough.
There is a six and a half-inch bird's-eye view map display, 30GB hard disc for storing mapping data and music, an auxiliary socket for connecting MP3 players and a DVD player function that can be used only when vehicle is stationary.
The system, using four ultrawide-angle 180-degree high-resolution cameras mounted on a vehicle's front, sides and rear, synthesizes a bird's-eye view of the vehicle and its surrounding environment, the automaker said.
Bird's-eye view and magnification thus come to define two oscillating poles of Gatten's inquiry.