English
Etymology
Borrowed from Late Latin intellēctus (“understanding, intellect”), perfect passive participle of Latin intellegō (“understand; reason”), from inter (“between, among”) + legō (“read”), with connotation of bind.
Pronunciation
Noun
intellect (countable and uncountable, plural intellects)
- (uncountable) The faculty of thinking, judging, abstract reasoning, and conceptual understanding; the cognitive faculty.
- Synonyms: see Thesaurus:intelligence
Intellect is one of man's greatest powers.
- (uncountable) The capacity of that faculty (in a particular person).
They were chosen because of their outstanding intellect.
1983, “Intelligence”, in Shiver, performed by Virna Lindt:Arms of stripes and shirts of checks / You had a very nice intellect
- A person who has that faculty to a great degree.
- Synonym: intellectual
Some of the world's leading intellects were meeting there.
Derived terms
Translations
the faculty of knowing and reasoning; understanding
- Albanian: intelekt (sq) m
- Arabic: عَقْل (ar) m (ʕaql), فِطْنَة f (fiṭna)
- Armenian: բանականություն (hy) (banakanutʻyun), խելք (hy) (xelkʻ)
- Avar: гӏакълу (ʻaqxʼlu)
- Azerbaijani: ağıl (az), intellekt
- Bashkir: аҡыл (aqıl)
- Belarusian: інтэле́кт m (inteljékt), ро́зум m (rózum), рассу́дак m (rassúdak), глузд m (hluzd)
- Bulgarian: интеле́кт (bg) m (intelékt), разсъ́дък (bg) m (razsǎ́dǎk), ум (bg) m (um), ра́зум (bg) m (rázum), акъ́л (bg) m (akǎ́l) (colloquial)
- Burmese: ဉာဏ (my) (nyana.), အသိဉာဏ် (my) (a.si.nyan)
- Catalan: intel·lecte (ca) m
- Chinese:
- Cantonese: 思力 (si1 lik6), 心智 (sam1 zi3), 智力 (zi3 lik6)
- Mandarin: 思力 (zh) (sīlì), 心智 (zh) (xīnzhì), 智力 (zh) (zhìlì)
- Chuvash: ӑс (ăs)
- Czech: intelekt (cs) m
- Danish: intellekt n
- Dutch: intellect (nl) n
- Estonian: intellekt, mõistus
- Finnish: äly (fi)
- French: intellect (fr) m
- Galician: intelecto m
- Georgian: ინტელექტი (ka) (inṭelekṭi), გონება (goneba)
- German: Intellekt (de) m
- Gothic: 𐍆𐍂𐌰𐌸𐌹 f (fraþi)
- Hebrew: תְּבוּנָה (he) f (tvuná)
- Hindi: बुद्धि (hi) f (buddhi), प्रज्ञा (hi) f (prajñā), अक़्ल f (aqla)
- Hungarian: ész (hu)
- Italian: intelletto (it) m
- Japanese: 知性 (ja) (ちせい, chisei)、思考力 (しこうりょく, shikōryoku)
- Kazakh: зият (ziät), интеллект (intellekt), ақыл (kk) (aqyl)
- Khmer: បញ្ញា (km) (paññaa), ញាណ (km) (ñiən)
- Korean: 지혜(智慧) (ko) (jihye), 지력(智力) (ko) (jiryeok), 지성(知性) (ko) (jiseong)
- Kyrgyz: эс (ky) (es), акыл (ky) (akıl), интеллект (intellekt)
- Lao: ປັນຍາ (lo) (pan nyā), ສະໝອງ (lo) (sa mǭng)
- Latin: intellectus m
- Latvian: intelekts m
- Lezgi: акьул (aq̇ul)
- Lithuanian: intelektas (lt) m
- Macedonian: интеле́кт m (intelékt), разум m (razum), ум (mk) m (um), акал m (akal) (colloquial)
- Maori: ihomatua, hirikapo
- Marathi: बुद्धी (mr) f (buddhī)
- Mongolian:
- Cyrillic: оюун ухаан (ojuun uxaan), оюун (mn) (ojuun)
- Navajo: bíniʼ
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: intellekt n
- Ossetian: зонд (zond)
- Ottoman Turkish: عقل (ʼakl, ʼakıl)
- Persian:
- Iranian Persian: عَقْل (aġl), هوشْمَنْدی (hušmandi), هوش (fa) (huš)
- Polish: intelekt (pl) m, rozum (pl) m, rozsądek (pl) m
- Portuguese: intelecto (pt) m
- Romanian: intelect (ro) n
- Russian: интелле́кт (ru) m (intellékt), ра́зум (ru) m (rázum), ум (ru) m (um)
- Sanskrit: मनस् (sa) n (manas)
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: интѐлект m, у̑м m, ра̏зӯм m
- Roman: intèlekt (sh) m, ȗm (sh) m, rȁzūm (sh) m
- Slovak: intelekt m, um m
- Slovene: intelekt m, razum m
- Spanish: intelecto (es) m
- Swedish: intellekt (sv) n
- Tabasaran: аькьюл (a̱q̇jul)
- Tajik: ақл (tg) (aql), ҳӯш (hüš), зеҳн (zehn)
- Tatar: акыл (tt) (aqıl)
- Tausug: akkal
- Thai: ปัญญา (th) (bpan-yaa), สมอง (th) (sà-mɔ̌ɔng), เมธา (mee-taa)
- Turkish: entelekt (tr), akıl (tr)
- Turkmen: akyl (tk), intellekt
- Ukrainian: інтеле́кт (uk) m (intelékt), ро́зум (uk) m (rózum), розсу́док m (rozsúdok), глузд m (hluzd)
- Urdu: عَقْل (ur) f ('aql)
- Uyghur: ئەقىل (ug) (eqil)
- Uzbek: aql (uz), intellekt (uz)
- Vietnamese: trí tuệ (vi) (智慧 (vi)), trí năng (vi) (智能)
- Welsh: dealltwriaeth f
|
that faculty in a particular person
a person who has that faculty in great degree
See also
Dutch
Etymology
Borrowed from French intellect or Latin intellēctus.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈɪn.tə.lɛkt/
- Hyphenation: in‧tel‧lect
Noun
intellect n (plural intellecten)
- intellect
- Synonym: intelligentie
Descendants
References
French
Etymology
Borrowed from Late Latin intellēctus (“understanding, intellect”), perfect passive participle of Latin intellegō (“understand; reason”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ɛ̃.tɛ.lɛkt/ ~ /ɛ̃.te.lɛkt/
Noun
intellect m (plural intellects)
- (psychology, philosophy) intellect
See also
Further reading