ns]
| 1. | capacity for learning, reasoning, understanding, and similar forms of mental activity; aptitude in grasping truths, relationships, facts, meanings, etc. |
| 2. | manifestation of a high mental capacity: He writes with intelligence and wit. |
| 3. | the faculty of understanding. |
| 4. | knowledge of an event, circumstance, etc., received or imparted; news; information. |
| 5. | the gathering or distribution of information, esp. secret information. |
| 6. | Government.
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| 7. | interchange of information: They have been maintaining intelligence with foreign agents for years. |
| 8. | Christian Science. a fundamental attribute of God, or infinite Mind. |
| 9. | (often initial capital letter ) an intelligent being or spirit, esp. an incorporeal one, as an angel. |
in·tel·li·gence (ĭn-těl'ə-jəns) n.
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intelligence in·tel·li·gence (ĭn-těl'ə-jəns)
n.
The capacity to acquire and apply knowledge, especially toward a purposeful goal.
An individual's relative standing on two quantitative indices, namely measured intelligence, as expressed by an intelligence quotient, and effectiveness of adaptive behavior.