intuit

[ UK /ɪntjˈuːɪt/ ]
[ US /ˌɪnˈtuət/ ]
VERB
  1. know or grasp by intuition or feeling
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How To Use intuit In A Sentence

  • It is not only our senses, but our very intuitive faculties that cease to provide us with the necessary adaptive knowledge.
  • To say he had given up would be wrong, but intuition seemed to tell him who the winner would be. Times, Sunday Times
  • The work of the Hard-Edge painters, their first collective exhibition catalog in 1959 asserted, runs counter to a widespread contemporary belief in the primary value of emotion and intuition in esthetic experience … the [Hard-Edge painter] is not preoccupied with art as an opportunity to make autobiographical statements. California Cool
  • His respect for produce runs deep, which helps explain what makes him an intuitive, natural chef. Times, Sunday Times
  • According to this account, our original intuitions about this inference were wrong.
  • Work-wise, it's good to trust your intuition. The Sun
  • I only played three carefully considered notes with intuitive regard to choice of rhythm, tempo, dynamics - using a poignant interval, the minor sixth resolving to the perfect fifth.
  • To help us "read" the messages which surround us and which are there to signpost the way, we have what some people call our intuition to trust. Life Without Work
  • Your mix of logic and intuition keeps you a step ahead in the working world. The Sun
  • The zombie intuitions on which such arguments rely are controversial and their soundness remains in dispute.
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