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intellection

[in-tl-ek-shuhn] / ˌɪn tlˈɛk ʃən /








Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

When the second half begins to drift, the absence of electric drive-by observation and intellection becomes more apparent.

From New York Times • Jul. 4, 2022

In books of the 1920s and ’30s — the Golden Age — one can experience the calm of austere intellection, observe the restoration of order after chaos.

From Washington Post • Aug. 4, 2020

The result is not just a greater capacity for intellection but changes to the central nervous system itself—e.g., learning to read permanently alters the way the brain processes language.

From Slate • Sep. 18, 2018

Has the power of that intellection been vacated as well?

From Time • Feb. 14, 2013

For like ourselves they have their fashions in clothes; their peculiar speech; their own hidden 163 means of intellection, and, to some extent, of imagination: but flounces they have not, they know not.

From The Book of Khalid by Rihani, Ameen Fares




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