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词汇 intuition
释义

Definition of intuition in English:

intuition

noun ɪntjʊˈɪʃ(ə)nˌɪnt(j)uˈɪʃ(ə)n
mass noun
  • 1The ability to understand something instinctively, without the need for conscious reasoning.

    直觉,直觉能力

    we shall allow our intuition to guide us

    我们将让直觉指引我们。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • His impulse is to flee, however his intuition is to stay with his child's waking memory.
    • Remember do not get overly concerned, basic common sense and intuition are your best guide.
    • She uses her acting abilities and intuition to bluff foes out of their clothes.
    • When I think about it, probably what I'm being told to do is just to run with my intuition and common sense.
    • Use your intuition and telepathy to decide whether either of these cards should take precedence over a non-trump Ace.
    • In addition to your five physical senses, you were born with intuition, your sixth sense.
    • Instinct and intuition rule their actions and decisions and reason be dammed!
    • She totally keeps amazing me with her intuition, her perception and her intellect.
    • The history of science tells story after story of challenges to human intuition.
    • Our intuition and psychic abilities will began to peak during this time.
    • In following your inner guide, wisdom and intuition you feel more whole, integrated and centered.
    • We're trusting our intuition a lot more and being able to rely on each other's intuition.
    • And also many of us believe that intuition is one of our tools in this search.
    • If the analyst does not know how to behave, or hold the frame, there is little room for intuition.
    • Enhance your intuition, which will allow you to look deeply within yourself and into others around you.
    • Nevertheless let us accept that astrologers may use some sort of intuition or psychic ability when reading a birth chart.
    • She learns some of her trade from books, but relies on her intuition and common sense for much more.
    • They know they have to live their own lives, and use that inherent intuition as a guide to practical decisions.
    • I've heard it vaguely before, and it exposes a hole in my understanding and intuition, if true.
    • They had no firm evidence, but every ounce of their intuition and common sense told them it was a stupid thing to do.
    Synonyms
    instinct, intuitiveness
    sixth sense, divination, clairvoyance, second sight, ESP (extrasensory perception)
    1. 1.1count noun A thing that one knows or considers likely from instinctive feeling rather than conscious reasoning.
      直觉感知的事,直觉知识
      your insights and intuitions as a native speaker are positively sought

      你对母语的领悟和直觉是大家特别希望获得的。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • The work is an attempt to say something interesting by exploring the author's hunches and intuitions.
      • Still, his obstinate moral intuitions may have been a virtue in this crisis.
      • What is certified in the end is a set of impressions, insights, and intuitions.
      • It's sort of an odd way of thinking about it, but it certainly matches many people's intuitions.
      • Hunches, guesses, insights, feelings, and intuitions lead to misdirection and error.
      • These intuitions are strengthened when we consider how current technology might conceivably extend.
      • As an illustration, consider our intuitions about brain-transplants.
      • Where exactly do you draw the distinction between concepts and intuitions in the actual use of language?
      • With that in mind, it's always interesting to see intuitions confirmed by quantitative or experimental analysis.
      • Subjective insights, intuitions and hunches fall into this category of knowledge.
      • Excluded from consideration are such matters as a speaker's intentions, intuitions, and conceptualizations.
      • According to this account, our original intuitions about this inference were wrong.
      • I have not seen anything that's as sensitive as workers' intuitions.
      • It can indicate premonitions or other intuitions about what is to come.
      • In this area, we quickly come down to moral intuitions and visceral reactions.
      • However, though intuitions can vary here, there is a powerful case for answering ‘No’.
      • Each can be seen as attempting to refine, rather than reject, the basic intuitions which motivated the previous one.
      • Here fundamental human moral intuitions will inevitably come into play.
      • His purpose on earth was to offer his own thoughts and intuitions to fellow seekers.
      • A second and more important reason not to rely on moral intuitions is that they may simply be wrong or unjust.
      Synonyms
      hunch, feeling, feeling in one's bones, gut feeling, funny feeling, inkling, sneaking suspicion, suspicion, impression
      premonition, presentiment, foreboding
      Buddhism satori
      informal feeling in one's water

Derivatives

  • intuitional

  • adjective ɪntjʊˈɪʃ(ə)n(ə)l
    • A ranking of brands according to customers' intuitional responses gives insight into each brand's position in consumers' minds, Hung said.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • There is the 38-day intuitional cycle, the 43-day aesthetic cycle, and the 53-day spiritual cycle.
      • His reputation stemmed from the publication in 1726 of Fifteen Sermons preached at the Rolls Chapel, in which he defines his moral philosophy, affirming an intuitional theory of virtue.
      • These included his versions of the strong law of large numbers and the law of the iterated logarithm, some generalisations of the operations of differentiation and integration, and a contribution to intuitional logic.
      • There had been something that had been bothering me for a while that I had refused to acknowledge: Why had Wade been acting the way he was after I had called him on a intuitional feeling I had about him and a grudge against me?

Origin

Late Middle English (denoting spiritual insight or immediate spiritual communication): from late Latin intuitio(n-), from Latin intueri 'consider' (see intuit).

Definition of intuition in US English:

intuition

nounˌint(y)o͞oˈiSH(ə)nˌɪnt(j)uˈɪʃ(ə)n
  • 1The ability to understand something immediately, without the need for conscious reasoning.

    直觉,直觉能力

    we shall allow our intuition to guide us

    我们将让直觉指引我们。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • They know they have to live their own lives, and use that inherent intuition as a guide to practical decisions.
    • Remember do not get overly concerned, basic common sense and intuition are your best guide.
    • She learns some of her trade from books, but relies on her intuition and common sense for much more.
    • In following your inner guide, wisdom and intuition you feel more whole, integrated and centered.
    • I've heard it vaguely before, and it exposes a hole in my understanding and intuition, if true.
    • When I think about it, probably what I'm being told to do is just to run with my intuition and common sense.
    • Enhance your intuition, which will allow you to look deeply within yourself and into others around you.
    • They had no firm evidence, but every ounce of their intuition and common sense told them it was a stupid thing to do.
    • Use your intuition and telepathy to decide whether either of these cards should take precedence over a non-trump Ace.
    • Instinct and intuition rule their actions and decisions and reason be dammed!
    • We're trusting our intuition a lot more and being able to rely on each other's intuition.
    • If the analyst does not know how to behave, or hold the frame, there is little room for intuition.
    • She totally keeps amazing me with her intuition, her perception and her intellect.
    • Nevertheless let us accept that astrologers may use some sort of intuition or psychic ability when reading a birth chart.
    • The history of science tells story after story of challenges to human intuition.
    • Our intuition and psychic abilities will began to peak during this time.
    • In addition to your five physical senses, you were born with intuition, your sixth sense.
    • And also many of us believe that intuition is one of our tools in this search.
    • She uses her acting abilities and intuition to bluff foes out of their clothes.
    • His impulse is to flee, however his intuition is to stay with his child's waking memory.
    Synonyms
    instinct, intuitiveness
    1. 1.1 A thing that one knows or considers likely from instinctive feeling rather than conscious reasoning.
      直觉感知的事,直觉知识
      your insights and intuitions as a native speaker are positively sought

      你对母语的领悟和直觉是大家特别希望获得的。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • As an illustration, consider our intuitions about brain-transplants.
      • Hunches, guesses, insights, feelings, and intuitions lead to misdirection and error.
      • Each can be seen as attempting to refine, rather than reject, the basic intuitions which motivated the previous one.
      • However, though intuitions can vary here, there is a powerful case for answering ‘No’.
      • In this area, we quickly come down to moral intuitions and visceral reactions.
      • Where exactly do you draw the distinction between concepts and intuitions in the actual use of language?
      • His purpose on earth was to offer his own thoughts and intuitions to fellow seekers.
      • It's sort of an odd way of thinking about it, but it certainly matches many people's intuitions.
      • It can indicate premonitions or other intuitions about what is to come.
      • With that in mind, it's always interesting to see intuitions confirmed by quantitative or experimental analysis.
      • Subjective insights, intuitions and hunches fall into this category of knowledge.
      • What is certified in the end is a set of impressions, insights, and intuitions.
      • Here fundamental human moral intuitions will inevitably come into play.
      • The work is an attempt to say something interesting by exploring the author's hunches and intuitions.
      • I have not seen anything that's as sensitive as workers' intuitions.
      • Still, his obstinate moral intuitions may have been a virtue in this crisis.
      • Excluded from consideration are such matters as a speaker's intentions, intuitions, and conceptualizations.
      • According to this account, our original intuitions about this inference were wrong.
      • These intuitions are strengthened when we consider how current technology might conceivably extend.
      • A second and more important reason not to rely on moral intuitions is that they may simply be wrong or unjust.
      Synonyms
      hunch, feeling, feeling in one's bones, gut feeling, funny feeling, inkling, sneaking suspicion, suspicion, impression

Origin

Late Middle English (denoting spiritual insight or immediate spiritual communication): from late Latin intuitio(n-), from Latin intueri ‘consider’ (see intuit).

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