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1 intellect
n. akıl, zihin gücü, idrak kabiliyeti, zeki kimse, akıllı kimse* * *akıl* * *['intilekt](the thinking power of the mind: He was a person of great intellect.) akıl, zihin
См. также в других словарях:
intellect — ► NOUN 1) the faculty of reasoning and understanding objectively. 2) a person s mental powers. 3) a clever person. ORIGIN Latin intellectus understanding … English terms dictionary
intellect — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ brilliant, formidable, great, keen, powerful, sharp, superior, towering ▪ limited, low … Collocations dictionary
intellect — noun a) the faculty of thinking, judging, abstract reasoning, and conceptual understanding (uncountable) Intellect is one of mans greatest powers. b) the capacity of that faculty (in a particular … Wiktionary
intellect — noun 1 (C, U) the ability to understand things and to think intelligently: new scientific ideas that are a challenge to the human intellect | a woman of superior intellect 2 (C) someone who is very intelligent: some of the greatest intellects in… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
intellect — I noun ability to perceive, ability to reason, ability to understand, brain, brilliance, cerebration, cognition, cognitive faculty, comprehension, genius, intellectual powers, intellectuality, intellegentia, intelligence, mens, mental ability,… … Law dictionary
intellect — (n.) late 14c. (but little used before 16c.), from O.Fr. intellecte intellectual capacity (13c.), and directly from L. intellectus discernment, a perception, understanding, from noun use of pp. of intelligere to understand, discern (see… … Etymology dictionary
intellect — noun 1) a film that appeals to one s intellect Syn: mind, brain(s), intelligence, reason, understanding, thought, brainpower, sense, judgment, wisdom, wits; informal gray matter, IQ, brain cells, smarts 2) one of the finest i … Thesaurus of popular words
intellect — noun Etymology: Middle English, from Middle French or Latin; Middle French, from Latin intellectus, from intellegere to understand more at intelligent Date: 14th century 1. a. the power of knowing as distinguished from the power to feel and to… … New Collegiate Dictionary
intellect — noun 1》 the faculty of reasoning and understanding objectively. ↘a person s mental powers. 2》 a clever person. Origin ME: from L. intellectus understanding , from intellegere (see intelligence) … English new terms dictionary
intellect — noun Syn: mind, brain(s), intelligence, reason, judgement, grey matter, brain cells … Synonyms and antonyms dictionary
intellect — UK [ˈɪntəlekt] / US [ˈɪnt(ə)lˌekt] noun Word forms intellect : singular intellect plural intellects 1) [uncountable] the ability to think in an intelligent way and to understand difficult or complicated ideas and subjects These activities are… … English dictionary