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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Intuitively

Intuitively \In*tu"i*tive*ly\, adv. In an intuitive manner.

Wiktionary
intuitively

adv. Done with skill, but without special training or planning; instinctively.

WordNet
intuitively

adv. in an intuitive manner; "inventors seem to have chosen intuitively a combination of explosive and aggressive sounds as warning signals to be used on automobiles"

Usage examples of "intuitively".

Perhaps we are intuitively compelled toward the alternative modality that best fits our energy and personality, or perhaps it is a crapshoot and does not matter which method we utilize for our needs.

Sun at the center, however, and the confusion reduces to a simplicity that reveals Keplerian order in a form that Newton was able to explain concisely in a way that was intuitively satisfying, and three hundred years of dazzlingly fruitful scientific unification followed.

In fact, he became a human computer, feeding into the kinesthetic part of his brain the relevant data and almost intuitively getting the answer.

Tyson had been on the verge of telling the man about Hopital Misericorde but knew intuitively that confession becomes a bad habit.

Perhaps, intuitively, my grandmother knew what researchers have now documented: naps are good for everyone.

Clark had intuitively reached the conclusions about black holes that astrophysicists are only now realizing.

Calling each woman in turn, Marissa learned what she intuitively suspected: both women confirmed that their internists had talked about their taking isoniazid.

Seemed intuitively to sense that it was a matter not of reduction at all, but perversely of expansion, the aleatory flutter of uncontrolled, metastatic growth each well-shot ball admitting of n possible responses, n2 possible responses to those responses, and on into what Incandenza would articulate to anyone who shared both his backgrounds as a Cantorian35 continuum of infinities of possible move and response, Cantorian and beautiful because wfoliating, contained, this diagnate infinity of infinities of choice and execution, mathematically uncontrolled but humanly contained, bounded by the talent and imagination of self and opponent, bent in on itself by the containing boundaries of skill and imagination that brought one player finally down, that kept both from winning, that made it, finally, a game, these boundaries of self.

He intuitively saw what Schiller has so well expressed, that it is an universal phenomenon of our nature that the mournful, the fearful, even the horrible, allures with irresistible enchantment He probed this general psychological law, in its subtle windings through the mystic chambers of our being, as it was never probed before, until he stood in the very abyss of its center, the sole master of its effects.

I do not care to be admired causelessly, emotionally, intuitively, instinctively—or blindly.

As soon as Hedley leaves, Dutton will go up to Desere Ellis' apartment and she'll know intuitively that he was sitting outside waiting for Hedley to go home.

That same capability advantage remains statistically differentiable even today, although the capabilities of increasingly advanced psychotronic circuitry and software have improved to a point at which the speed with which Bolos process information, even linearly, has very largely overtaken the human ability to process it intuitively.

The queen bee leads them, and the other bees follow in a swarm that discolors the air with its vastness and shivers through rooms that have been silent for centuries (for surely we understand - intuitively if not logically - that Black House existed long before Burny built its most recent node in French Landing).

Things he had never understood-relativity and magnetic theory and abstract mathematics-he now grasped intuitively.

Things he had never understood -- relativity and magnetic theory and abstract mathematics -- he now grasped intuitively.