What is the meaning of INTU. Phrases containing INTU
See meanings and uses of INTU!INTU
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Acronyms & AI meanings
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Canada Farm Income Program
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Initiative for Quality Promotion and Epidemiology for Diabetes
Lieutenant of Marines
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Kern High School District
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adv.
In an intuitive manner.
a.
Capable of being directly known by, or presented to, the mind; intuitive; directly apprehensible, as objects; capable of apprehending, as faculties.
n.
Same as Intuitionalism.
a.
Seeing clearly; as, an intuitive view; intuitive vision.
a.
Pertaining to, or derived from, intuition; characterized by intuition; perceived by intuition; intuitive.
n.
One who holds the doctrine of intuitionalism.
v. t.
To insert as in a sheath; to produce intussusception in.
n.
Same as Intuitionalist.
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Intumesce
imp. & p. p.
of Inturbidate
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Inturbidate
a.
Knowing, or perceiving, by intuition; capable of knowing without deduction or reasoning.
n.
A term now used to designate any one of a family of minerals, hydrous silicates of alumina, with lime, soda, potash, or rarely baryta. Here are included natrolite, stilbite, analcime, chabazite, thomsonite, heulandite, and others. These species occur of secondary origin in the cavities of amygdaloid, basalt, and lava, also, less frequently, in granite and gneiss. So called because many of these species intumesce before the blowpipe.
n.
The doctrine held by Condillac, and by some ascribed to Locke, that our ideas originate solely in sensation, and consist of sensations transformed; sensualism; -- opposed to intuitionalism, and rationalism.
n.
The doctrine that the ideas of right and wrong are intuitive.
n.
The act of taking foreign matter, as food, into a living body; the process of nutrition, by which dead matter is absorbed by the living organism, and ultimately converted into the organized substance of its various tissues and organs.
imp. & p. p.
of Intumesce
n.
The doctrine that the perception or recognition of primary truth is intuitive, or direct and immediate; -- opposed to sensationalism, and experientialism.
a.
Received. reached, obtained, or perceived, by intuition; as, intuitive judgment or knowledge; -- opposed to deductive.
n.
Direct apprehension or cognition; immediate knowledge, as in perception or consciousness; -- distinguished from "mediate" knowledge, as in reasoning; as, the mind knows by intuition that black is not white, that a circle is not a square, that three are more than two, etc.; quick or ready insight or apprehension.
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