A Complete Word Dictionary Encyclopedia
A Complete Word Dictionary Encyclopedia

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 Could not find an exact match for intelstitial.html. Closest matches are listed below.
Traditional English :: Intelsat
intelstitial.html - n.
an international organization of countries operating a system of commercial communication satellites. [International Telecommunications Satellite Consortium]
New English :: intelligentÜ
intelstitial.html - adjective (Environment) ( Science and Technology) Of an office or other building: containing a full set of integrated services such as heating, lighting , electronic office equipment , etc., all controlled by a central computer system which is capable of ensuring the most efficient and sound use of the environment's resources. Etymology: A further development from the sense defined in the entry above: the environment is controlled by an intelligent computer system, but when this runs all services within the building, it is the building itself that comes to be described as intelligent. History and Usage: The first intelligent office buildings were built in the US in 1983 and by the middle of the eighties intelligent had become one of the buzzwords of office design both in the US and in the UK. It is difficult to say whether this further development of the adjective will survive in the language, but it certainly seems to express a design concept which is in keeping with the prevailing concern for integrated and efficient use of resources. One of Britain's most advanced high tech 'intelligent' office developments, Northgate is nearing completion. Glaswegian Dec. 1986, p.
12 To a practitioner in the field of energy, 'intelligent buildings' involve energy engineering and building services, and suggest buildings whose facades, fabric and services combine (passively where possible) to optimise the environment and the consumption of energy. Architech June 1989, p. 43
New English :: intelligent°
intelstitial.html - adjective (Science and Technology) Of a machine: able to respond to different circumstances, developments, etc. or to 'learn' from past experience and apply this knowledge in new situations. Used especially of a computer or other electronic equipment: containing its own microprocessor , smart. Etymology: A transferred sense of intelligent, influenced by the term artificial intelligence (see AI ); unlike the dumb machine which can only pass messages to and from a more powerful host and respond to specific instructions, the intelligent one can adjust its responses according to circumstance. History and Usage: The word has been used in computing since the late sixties, although Joseph Conrad had anticipated the concept as long ago as 1907 in his book The Secret Agent: I am trying to invent a detonator that would adjust itself to all conditions of action, and even to unexpected changes of conditions. A variable and yet perfectly precise mechanism. A really intelligent detonator. During the seventies and early eighties microelectronics began to be incorporated into a wide variety of consumer goods, bringing this concept of the intelligent machine into the public eye and giving the word a wide currency. Software systems can also be described as intelligent: an intelligent knowledge-based system (or IKBS) is similar to an expert system in that it stores the decision-making capability of human experts and can act on different data and developments on this basis, but it takes the principle of artificial intelligence one step further . The Japanese Fifth Generation computer project aimed at stimulating the development of the next generation of intelligent and powerful computer systems, has laid great emphasis on the importance of Intelligent Knowledge-based Systems (IKBS). Australian Personal Computer June 1985, p.
101 An intelligent masterkeyboard...allows control, via MIDI, of up to eight synthesizers in all registrations. Keyboard Player Apr. 1986, p.
27 Gerald Ratner suggests that intelligent tills will generate up to 30 p.c. more profit at the Salisburys shops he bought recently from Next. Daily Telegraph 6 Feb. 1989, p.
22 It is an 'intelligent' scanner in that it learns the shape of letters in the text, and can recognise up to ten different type faces per text. English Today July 1989, p.
49 See also active
Traditional English :: intellect
intelstitial.html - n.
1 a the faculty of reasoning, knowing, and thinking, as distinct from feeling. b the understanding or mental powers (of a particular person etc.) (his intellect is not great).
2 a a clever or knowledgeable person. b the intelligentsia regarded collectively (the combined intellect of four universities). [ME f. OF intellect or L intellectus understanding (as INTELLIGENT)]
Traditional English :: intellection
intelstitial.html - n.
the action or process of understanding (opp. IMAGINATION).
    intellective adj. [ME f. med.L intellectio (as INTELLIGENT)]
Traditional English :: intellectual
intelstitial.html - adj. & n.
--adj.
    1 of or appealing to the intellect.
    2 possessing a high level of understanding or intelligence; cultured.
    3 requiring, or given to the exercise of, the intellect.
--n.
    a person possessing a highly developed intellect.
    intellectuality n. intellectualize v.tr. & intr. (also -ise). intellectually adv. [ME f. L intellectualis (as INTELLECT)]
intelstitial.html -