释义 |
intelligential, a.|ɪntɛlɪˈdʒɛnʃəl| [f. L. intelligentia intelligence + -al1. (Cf. the It. in quot. 1611.)] 1. Of, belonging to, relating to, or treating of, intelligence or intellect: = intellectual A. 1.
1611Florio, Intelegentiale, intelligentiall, intelectuall. 1647Crashaw Poems 164 We vow to make brave way Upwards, and press on for the pure intelligential prey. 1667Milton P.L. ix. 190 The Devil enterd, and his brutal sense,..soon inspir'd With act intelligential. 1814Cary Dante, Paradise xxiv. 132, I in one God believe;..Nor demonstration physical alone, Or more intelligential and abstruse, Persuades me to this faith. 1873M. Arnold Lit. & Dogma i. (1876) 45 Indications..of a true law of our being on its æsthetic and intelligential side. 2. Possessing, or of the nature of, intelligence: = intellectual A. 3, intelligent A. 1.
1646Gaule Cases Consc. 115 Though Devills be intelligential Creatures. 1792M. Wollstonecraft Rights Wom. iv. 163 An intelligential creature who is not to receive but acquire happiness. 1876Blackie Songs Relig. & Life 17 First Thought, first Word, first Deed, these three, Intelligential Trinity, That was, and is, and is to be. 3. Relating to or conveying intelligence or news.
1883Century Mag. XXVI. 692 The New York telegraph office, radiates 250,000 miles of intelligential nerves to ten thousand minor centers in America. |