Get Free Checker

intuition

[ US /ˌɪntuˈɪʃən/ ]
[ UK /ɪntjuːˈɪʃən/ ]
NOUN
  1. instinctive knowing (without the use of rational processes)
  2. an impression that something might be the case
    he had an intuition that something had gone wrong

How To Use intuition In A Sentence

  • 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
  • According to this account, our original intuitions about this inference were wrong.
  • Work-wise, it's good to trust your intuition. The Sun
  • 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.
  • Despite the substantial contributions he had made to topology by this time, Brouwer chose to give his inaugural professorial lecture on intuitionism and formalism.
  • Also, I'm pretty sure that his intuition is correct about the unrequited bromance.
  • The choice of autonomous relations in explanatory models is primarily a matter of adequate knowledge and intuition regarding the basic mechanisms of the economy. The Prize in Economics 1989 - Press Release
View all