intellect / ˈɪn tlˌɛkt /

💦中学词汇智力理智智慧理智的

intellect 的定义

n. 名词 noun
  1. the power or faculty of the mind by which one knows or understands, as distinguished from that by which one feels and that by which one wills; the understanding; the faculty of thinking and acquiring knowledge.
  2. capacity for thinking and acquiring knowledge, especially of a high or complex order; mental capacity.
  3. a particular mind or intelligence, especially of a high order.
  4. a person possessing a great capacity for thought and knowledge.
  5. minds collectively, as of a number of persons or the persons themselves.

intellect 近义词

n. 名词 noun

capability of the mind; someone with capable mind

更多intellect例句

  1. Not just your intellect but also — and most hard to replace — your heart.
  2. “Mayor Buttigieg has impressive credentials that demonstrate his intellect and commitment to serving our nation,” Wicker said.
  3. “Don’t let the complexity of your intellect cloud what needs to be simple,” she said.
  4. A new study by the nonprofit Strada Education Network reveals that for many surprising reasons students who have the motivation and intellect to do well are still receiving too little guidance on what courses they need to succeed.
  5. Parent applied his versatile intellect to a vast scope of scientific fields.
  6. As in the case of Turner, the core of the intellect is missing.
  7. Anyone with the intellect of a ping-pong ball should understand how opportunistic that whistleblowing looks.
  8. Renowned livestock specialist and autism advocate Temple Grandin brought her unique intellect and wit to Reddit.
  9. Tavis Smiley, the PBS talk show host and close friend to Cornel West, often credits West with having a “useable intellect.”
  10. He is a man of deep faith and brilliant intellect, with a healthy dose of modernity and realism.
  11. How much of the imagination, how much of the intellect, evaporates and is lost while we seek to embody it in words!
  12. It is the will directing the activity of the intellect into some particular channel and keeping it there.
  13. In running over many words, the intellect might be arrested by chance.
  14. The intellect might be abolished so far as its participation in such an operation is concerned.
  15. And the most vivid First Impressions always result from the action of the intellect upon the sensuous stimuli from ear and eye.