intelligent - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
- entelligent (obsolete)
From Middle French intelligent, from Latin intellegēns (“discerning”), present active participle of intellegō (“understand, comprehend”), itself from inter (“between”) + legō (“choose, pick out, read”).
intelligent (comparative more intelligent or (rare, proscribed) intelligenter, superlative most intelligent or (rare, proscribed) intelligentest)
- Of high or especially quick cognitive capacity, bright.
1927, F. E. Penny, chapter 5, in Pulling the Strings:
Anstruther laughed good-naturedly. “[…] I shall take out half a dozen intelligent maistries from our Press and get them to give our villagers instruction when they begin work and when they are in the fields.”
- Well thought-out, well considered.
The engineer had a very intelligent design proposal for the new car.
The general devised an intelligent strategy for the southern campaign.
- Characterized by thoughtful interaction.
My girlfriend and I had an intelligent conversation.
- Having at least a similar level of brain power to humankind.
The hunt for extraterrestrial intelligent life continues.
- (computing) Having an environment-sensing automatically-invoked built-in computer capability.
an intelligent network or keyboard
- (of high or quick cognitive capacity): See Thesaurus:intelligent
- (similar level of brain power to mankind): See Thesaurus:self-aware
- artificially intelligent
- general intelligent action
- intelligent agent
- intelligent character recognition
- intelligent dance music
- intelligent design
- intelligent designer
- intelligent designism
- intelligent disobedience
- intelligent falling
- intelligent haunting
- intelligent system
- intelligent terminal
- intelligent transportation system
of high or especially quick cognitive capacity, bright
- Adyghe: акъыл (aqəl)
- Albanian: i zgjuar (sq)
- Arabic: ذَكِيّ (ḏakiyy)
- Egyptian Arabic: زكي (zakī)
- Armenian: խելացի (hy) (xelacʻi), խելոք (hy) (xelokʻ)
- Aromanian: dishteptu
- Assamese: বুধিয়ক (budhik)
- Asturian: intelixente
- Bashkir: аҡыллы (aqıllı)
- Belarusian: разу́мны (razúmny)
- Bengali: বুদ্ধিমান (bn) (buddhiman)
- Bulgarian: интелигентен (bg) (inteligenten), схватлив (bg) (shvatliv)
- Catalan: intel·ligent (ca)
- Cherokee: ᎠᏌᎹᏗ (asamadi)
- Chinese:
- Czech: inteligentní (cs)
- Dutch: intelligent (nl)
- Esperanto: inteligenta (eo)
- Finnish: älykäs (fi)
- French: intelligent (fr)
- Galician: intelixente (gl), espelido
- Georgian: ინტელიგენტური (inṭeligenṭuri), საზრიანი (ka) (sazriani)
- German: klug (de); intelligent (de)
- Greek: έξυπνος (el) (éxypnos)
- Ancient: συνετός (sunetós)
- Hebrew: נָבוֹן (he) m (navón)
- Hindi: बुद्धिमान (hi) (buddhimān), चतुर (hi) (catur)
- Hungarian: intelligens (hu)
- Icelandic: gáfaður
- Ido: inteligenta (io)
- Irish: éirimiúil
- Italian: intelligente (it)
- Japanese: 聡明な (ja) (そうめいな, sōmei na), 賢い (ja) (かしこい, kashikoi), 利口な (ja) (りこうな, rikō na)
- Karakhanid: بِلْكا (bilgē)
- Kavalan: msanem
- Khmer: ឆ្លាត (km) (chlaat)
- Korean: (predicate) 똑똑하다 (ko) (ttokttok-hada), (attributive) 똑똑한 (ttokttok-han), 총명하다 (ko) (chongmyeong-hada)
- Kurdish:
- Central Kurdish: زیرەک (zîrek)
- Lao: please add this translation if you can
- Latin: intelligens, catus
- Latvian: prātīgs, saprātīgs, gudrs (lv)
- Lingala: mayele
- Lithuanian: protingas
- Malay: cerdas (ms), pintar (ms)
- Malayalam: ബുദ്ധിയുള്ള (buddhiyuḷḷa)
- Maori: punenga, koi te hinengaro
- Mongolian: ухаалаг (mn) (uxaalag)
- Norwegian: intelligent (no)
- Occitan: intelligent (oc)
- Old English: andġietol
- Persian: باهوش (fa) (bâ-huš), هوشمند (fa) (huš-mand)
- Plautdietsch: Forcht f, beschläpen
- Polish: inteligentny (pl)
- Portuguese: inteligente (pt)
- Punjabi: ਅਕਲਮੰਦ (pa) (akalmand)
- Romanian: inteligent (ro), deștept (ro)
- Russian: у́мный (ru) (úmnyj), разу́мный (ru) (razúmnyj), сообрази́тельный (ru) (soobrazítelʹnyj), смышлёный (ru) (smyšljónyj), поня́тливый (ru) (ponjátlivyj)
- Sango: mayele
- Sanskrit: प्रज्ञ (sa) (prajña), चतुर (sa) (catura), मनु (sa) (manu)
- Sicilian: ntilliggenti (scn), spertu
- Slovak: inteligentný
- Spanish: inteligente (es)
- Swahili: akili (sw)
- Swedish: intelligent (sv), klyftig (sv) (colloquial), klok (sv)
- Tagalog: intelihente, matalino, (literally) matalino
- Thai: ฉลาด (th) (chà-làat)
- Turkish: akıllı (tr)
- Ukrainian: розу́мний (rozúmnyj)
- Urdu: ہوشیار (hośiyār)
- Vietnamese: thông minh (vi) (聰明 (vi))
- Welsh: deallus (cy)
well thought-out, well considered
- Asturian: intelixente
- Bulgarian: умен (bg) (umen), разумен (bg) (razumen)
- Catalan: intel·ligent (ca)
- Dutch: intelligent (nl), doordacht (nl)
- Finnish: älykäs (fi)
- French: intelligent (fr)
- Galician: intelixente (gl)
- German: klug (de); intelligent (de)
- Greek: έξυπνος (el) (éxypnos)
- Italian: intelligente (it)
- Kurdish:
- Central Kurdish: زیرەک (zîrek)
- Occitan: intelligent (oc)
- Portuguese: inteligente (pt)
- Russian: у́мный (ru) (úmnyj), проду́манный (ru) (prodúmannyj), разу́мный (ru) (razúmnyj), здра́вый (ru) (zdrávyj)
- Spanish: inteligente (es)
- Tagalog: intelihente, pinag-isipan
characterized by thoughtful interaction
having at least a similar level of brain power to humankind
Translations to be checked
Partly from Russian интеллиге́нт (intelligént) and partly from the adjective.
intelligent (plural intelligents)
- A member of the intelligentsia; an intelligent person.
1832, The Comparative Coincidence of Reason and Scripture, volume II, London: J[ohn] Hatchard and Son, […], page 253:
Now, as all intelligents are doomed to pass probationary states, it is highly probable that many intelligents, long antecedent to the foundation of our world, may have tarnished their innocence; or worse, many may have by disobedience fallen.
1972, Olga Matich, Paradox in the Religious Poetry of Zinaida Gippius, Wilhelm Fink, →ISBN, page 30:
Like many Russian intelligents, the Merežkovskijs, together with Filosofov and the young student Vladimir Zlobin, fled from Russia in 1919.
2000, Nadieszda Kizenko, A Prodigal Saint: Father John of Kronstadt and the Russian People, The Pennsylvania State University Press, published 2003, →ISBN, page 248:
But if you fall away from your faith, as many intelligents have fallen away, then you will no longer be Russia or Holy Rus’, but a rabble of all kinds of other faiths who wish to destroy one another.
2011, Evgenii L’vovich Feinberg, translated by Andrei Vladimirovich Leonidov, Physicists: Epoch and Personalities (History of Modern Physical Sciences; 4), World Scientific, →ISBN, page 43:
Many Russian intelligents, in particular scientists, that already in tsarist times were “infected” by liberal and even socialist ideas found in the revolution and the societal structure that followed, with all its horrible features, positive sides.
From French intelligent.
intelligent
positive | comparative | superlative | |
---|---|---|---|
indefinite common singular | intelligent | — | —2 |
indefinite neuter singular | intelligent | — | —2 |
plural | intelligente | — | —2 |
definite attributive1 | intelligente | — | — |
1 When an adjective is applied predicatively to something definite,
the corresponding "indefinite" form is used.
2 The "indefinite" superlatives may not be used attributively.
From French intelligent, from Latin intellegēns (“discerning”), present active participle of intellegō (“understand, comprehend”), itself from inter (“between”) + legō (“choose, pick out, read”).
intelligent (comparative intelligenter, superlative intelligentst)
- intelligent, bright, smart
Declension of intelligent | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
uninflected | intelligent | |||
inflected | intelligente | |||
comparative | intelligenter | |||
positive | comparative | superlative | ||
predicative/adverbial | intelligent | intelligenter | het intelligentst het intelligentste | |
indefinite | m./f. sing. | intelligente | intelligentere | intelligentste |
n. sing. | intelligent | intelligenter | intelligentste | |
plural | intelligente | intelligentere | intelligentste | |
definite | intelligente | intelligentere | intelligentste | |
partitive | intelligents | intelligenters | — |
- intellect
- intellectueel m & adjective
- intelligentia
- intelligentie
- → Indonesian: inteligen
Borrowed from Latin intelligentem (“discerning”), present active participle of intellegō (“understand, comprehend”), itself from inter (“between”) + legō (“choose, pick out, read”).
intelligent (feminine intelligente, masculine plural intelligents, feminine plural intelligentes)
- ^ “intelligent”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012.
- “intelligent”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012.
From Latin intellegēns (“discerning”), present active participle of intellegō (“understand, comprehend”), itself from inter (“between”) + legō (“choose, pick out, read”).
intelligent (strong nominative masculine singular intelligenter, comparative intelligenter, superlative am intelligentesten)
- intelligent
- Synonym: klug
2010, Der Spiegel[1], number 5/2010, page 100:
Delphine sind die mit Abstand intelligentesten aller Tiere.
- Dolphins are by far the most intelligent of all animals.
Positive forms of intelligent
Comparative forms of intelligent
Superlative forms of intelligent
- “intelligent” in Duden online
- “intelligent” in Digitales Wörterbuch der deutschen Sprache
intelligent
intelligent (comparative intelligentare, superlative intelligentast)
- intelligent, bright
- Antonym: ointelligent
intelligent (comparative intelligentare, superlative intelligentast)