intelligence
名词 n.
英文释义
名词 n.
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The capacity of mind, especially to understand principles, truths, facts or meanings, acquire knowledge, and apply it to practice; the ability to comprehend and learn; the ability to process sentient experience to generate true beliefs with a justified degree of confidence.
— Not so, however, with Tarzan, the man-child. His life amidst the dangers of the jungle had taught him to meet emergencies with self-confidence, and his higher intelligence resulted in a quickness of mental action far beyond the powers of the apes.
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The capacity of mind, especially to understand principles, truths, facts or meanings, acquire knowledge, and apply it to practice; the ability to comprehend and learn; the ability to process sentient experience to generate true beliefs with a justified degree of confidence.; An individual's expected relative performance in a cognitive test.
— intelligence quotient
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The capacity of mind, especially to understand principles, truths, facts or meanings, acquire knowledge, and apply it to practice; the ability to comprehend and learn; the ability to process sentient experience to generate true beliefs with a justified degree of confidence.; The quality of making use or having made use of such capacities: depth of understanding, mental quickness.
— From a religious point of view, a bodhisattva with sharp faculties and great intelligence can cause a tremendous upheaval if he or she misuses that power under the influence of negative emotions, like attachment and hatred.
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An entity that has such capacities.
— The great Intelligences fair That range above our mortal state, In circle round the blessed gate, Received and gave him welcome there.
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Information, often secret, about an enemy or about hostile activities.
— Their lack of good intelligence also meant that they vastly overestimated the size of their foes for far too long, hails of armor-piercing shells doing comparatively little damage compared to the high explosive that they should have been using.
- Information, often secret, about an enemy or about hostile activities.; A political or military department, agency or unit designed to gather information, usually secret, about the enemy or about hostile activities.
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Acquaintance; intercourse; familiarity.
— Yet Josephus tells us of Phiala, a ſpring[…] into which Philip the Tetrarch caſt chaffe to try the experiment, and it was rendred up again into the ſtreame of Iordan. Whence he concluded, that this river entertained an underground intelligence with that fountain.
词形变化
词汇关系
近义词
反义词
blockheadedness
boneheadedness
density
denseness
dimness
dimwittedness
doltery
dullness
dullwittedness
dumbness
dumminess
duncedom
duncehood
duncery
emptyheadedness
fatuity
foolery
foolishness
hebetude
idioticness
idiocy
imbecility
moronicity
moronicness
obtuseness
obtusity
slow-wittedness
stolidity
stupidity
thickheadedness
vacuity
vacuousness
衍生词
adaptive intelligence
anti-intelligence
artificial general intelligence
artificial intelligence
business intelligence
CIA
co-intelligence
communications intelligence
computational intelligence
counter-intelligence
counter intelligence
counterintelligence
cyberintelligence
electronic intelligence
ELINT
emotional intelligence
extelligence
fluid intelligence
human intelligence
HUMINT
hyperintelligence
insult one's intelligence
intel
intelligence agency
intelligence asset
intelligence community
intelligenced
intelligence-gathering
intelligencelike
intelligence office
intelligence officer
intelligence quotient
intelligencer
intelligence service
intelligencing
IQ
machine intelligence
MI5
MI6
misintelligence
nobody ever went broke underestimating the intelligence of the American people
nobody ever went broke underestimating the intelligence of the American public
nonintelligence
no one ever went broke underestimating the intelligence of the American public
SIGINT
signals intelligence
SIS
social media intelligence
SOCMINT
superintelligence
swarm intelligence
synthetic intelligence
tactical intelligence
unintelligence
词源
From Middle English intelligence, from Old French intelligence, from Latin intelligentia, which is from inter- (“between”) + legere (“to choose, pick out, read”), from Proto-Italic *legō (“to care”). Doublet of intelligentsia.
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数据来源: Wiktionary