释义 |
intue, v. rare.|ɪnˈtjuː| [ad. L. intuē-rī: see intuition.] trans. To know, perceive, or recognize by intuition; to intuit.
1860W. G. Ward Nat. & Grace i. 40 We will further use the word ‘intue’, as corresponding in every respect with the substantive ‘intuition’, and the adjective ‘intuitive’. 1869Life M. M. Hallahan (1870) 124 It was a part of her religious sense, something which, to borrow a word of modern coinage, she had from the first intued. 1874Contemp. Rev. Dec. 69 Dr. Ward attempts to leap off his own shadow by all manner of strange phrases about necessary truth and contingent truth, ‘cognizing’, ‘intuing’, ‘ontologism’. 1888J. Martineau Study Relig. I. i. iv. 115 These two related terms, the intuent act and the thing intued were, in the view of the Greek Realist, only one. |