Antonym: ignorant, stupid. Similar words: intellectually, actual, actually, lecture, collect, collector, collective, collection. Meaning: [‚ɪntə'lektʃʊəl] n. a person who uses the mind creatively. adj. 1. of or relating to the intellect 2. of or associated with or requiring the use of the mind 3. appealing to or using the intellect 4. involving intelligence rather than emotions or instinct.
Random good picture Not show
91, The argument from intimidation is a confession of intellectual impotence. Ayn Rand
92, My mother was the most beautiful woman I ever saw. All I am I owe to my mother. I attribute my success in life to the moral, intellectual and physical education I received from her. George Washington
93, Chimp behavior holds insights into teaching humans self-esteem, intellectual curiosity and the ability to get along with others, she says.
94, It is difficult to conceive of such thinking taking place without the growth and development of intellectual ability.
95, Vygotsky was concerned with the question of how social and cultural factors influence intellectual development.
96, Books are the spiritual and intellectual food of the mind, and reading is a great enjoyment for those who desire to improve their mental power. Dr T.P.Chia
97, In short, they're advertisements not just for your financial status, but for your impeccable intellectual and social credentials.
98, I try and meet the intellectual types at bookstores, but all the attractive men tend to congregate in the porno sections.
99, When intellectual influences of this sort have to be considered by the general historian(http://Sentencedict.com), he can not go far for himself.
100, Religion is part of the human make-up. It's also part of our cultural and intellectual history. Religion was our first attempt at literature, the texts, our first attempt at cosmology, making sense of where we are in the universe, our first attempt at health care, believing in faith healing, our first attempt at philosophy. Christopher Hitchens
101, Although we think about affect as being different from cognition, they are united in intellectual functioning.
102, More literary games, but here intellectual conceits are mixed with bawdy farce.
103, These differences are perhaps more acute on an intellectual level than in reality.
104, Ayrton Senna is always carrying on about the intellectual and spiritual fascination of discovering his own limits in a racing car.
105, The examples developed here are heavily biased towards the leadership and intellectual rationalization for the movement.
106, It was then but an intellectual elision to view abstraction as the purest of all styles, since it depicted nothing at all.
107, Reading this book(sentencedict.com), I am struck by how much intellectual work can revolve around playing with blocks.
108, They can be valuable purely as a means of providing social companionship, activities of all descriptions, and intellectual stimulation.
109, First, Piaget did his research on and wrote primarily about the cognitive aspects of intellectual development and cognitive structure.
110, The subject of International Relations grew out of this intellectual and political setting; and it bore the birthmarks of its origins.
111, Though the war had interrupted her schooling, her intellectual precocity had quickly been recognized and appreciated by Stewart.
112, These investigations of the sun's luminosity are not just intellectual curiosity.
113, An intellectual is a person who has discovered something more interesting than sex. Aldous Huxley
114, All this is concurrent with a decline in intellectual egocentrism and an increased ability to see the viewpoint of others.
115, The pride he should be enjoying from his intellectual achievements is buried beneath his morbid obesity.
116, A native Nebraskan and a West Point graduate, Wedemeyer had an intellectual bent and a capacity for strategic thinking.
117, Relaxation or withdrawal of treatment before mid-childhood has been associated with a further decline in intellectual ability.
118, Intellectual and biological activity are both part of the overall process by which an organism adapts to the environment and organizes experience.
119, The campaign against apprenticeship in 1837-8 required no great dialectical ingenuity or intellectual departures by the abolitionists.
120, The issue of intellectual ability is especially important when considering the prevalence of mild dementia.
More similar words: intellectually, actual, actually, lecture, collect, collector, collective, collection, collectivity, electoral college, tell, mutual, ritual, virtual, virtually, perpetual, tell on, eventually, mutualism, satellite, seller, elect, select, conjecture, electric, selected, election, architecture, telecommunications, selection.