savants 的定义
plural sa·vants [sa-vahnts, sav-uhnts; French sa-vahn]. /sæˈvɑnts, ˈsæv ənts; French saˈvɑ̃/.
- a person of profound or extensive learning; learned scholar.
savants 近义词
scholar
savants 的近义词 14 个
- academic
- bookworm
- brain
- egghead
- expert
- intellect
- intellectual
- learner
- master
- philosopher
- pundit
- sage
- learned person
- wise person
savants 的反义词 2 个
更多savants例句
- Imagine having 41 of the best runners in the world flown in for the sole purpose of pacing you to glory, and a vast team of logistics savants dedicating years of planning to help you succeed on the day.
- Most algorithms trained to accomplish a specific task—like, in DeepMind’s case, to win at games such as Go or Starcraft—are savants.
- The Good Doctor, ABC’s medical drama about an autistic savant who works as a surgical resident, premiered that September and became an instant hit.
- The autistic savant has a gallery in London and has traveled the world while creating his unforgettable images.
- In the past few years, even broadcast hits like ABC’s “The Good Doctor,” about a young surgeon with autism and savant syndrome, are unafraid to tackle these challenges.
- Like a savant, he navigates us through a tasting of three French beers, finished off by a pairing with 18-month-old comté cheese.
- She has a blog, Fox on Stocks, where the self-taught savant holds forth on the ins and outs of the market.
- Internet savant Aaron Swartz was found dead in his New York apartment on Friday from an apparent suicide.
- The New York Times electoral savant was said to be “controversial.”
- Lynette becomes a CEO and she and Tom (Doug Savant) move to New York City, buy a penthouse, and have six grandchildren.
- The perfumer destined this engraving for the savant Vauquelin, to whom he was under obligations.
- The future famous savant (Desplein) watched by his bedside at the last and closed his eyes.
- She looked up to the young savant, if not as a god or hero, at least as a man far superior to his contemporaries.
- I had been thinking lately that the distinguished savant was going decidedly wrong.
- Liszt wrote a rejoinder in which he failed to justify himself, but succeeded in giving the poor savant some hard hits.