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Of high or especially quick cognitive capacity.
bright
smart
clever
intelligent
quick-witted
sharp-witted
Witty.
humorous
humourous
Synonyms
Examples for "
bright
"
bright
smart
clever
intelligent
quick-witted
Examples for "
bright
"
1
And he said the future of American business and markets is
bright
.
2
They were all healthy young people, with
bright
minds and good values.
3
In an instant you forget; the sky is
bright
;
the blood pounds.
4
However, beyond the
bright
lights of New York visibility was not good.
5
At just 44 years of age, his future remained
bright
,
they concluded.
1
Consumers should balance security concerns with their need to use
smart
devices.
2
It needed to be a good question: something
smart
,
perceptive, and classy.
3
They want a pollution economy - we want a
smart
green economy.
4
She was obviously
smart
enough to understand the situation without being told.
5
But the new thinking is what organisations need is really
smart
people.
1
However the team found a
clever
way of working out the age.
2
At first he thought simply of
clever
questions to ask the Sage.
3
MagSafe is extremely
clever
as a concept and exceedingly fine in reality.
4
The vibe knob is a
clever
solution to a thorny social problem.
5
There's some really
clever
use of pixelation and freezing and different points.
1
Technology offers great promise with
'
intelligent
borders'. Hunt was educated at Oxford.
2
You'd think they'd develop an
intelligent
approach to land allocation and use.
3
As a result, their insults are often witty, literary and highly
intelligent
.
4
Between ten and twenty components come together to form an
intelligent
individual.
5
You're here because you're both young,
intelligent
,
active professionals with good prospects.
1
He's self-deprecating and
quick
-
witted
enough to keep the action breezing right along.
2
They have the reputation of being the most
quick
-
witted
of all Chinese.
3
But the four police were oversure, and Yasmini too
quick
-
witted
for them.
4
He jests with his grief, too, in
quick
-
witted
retort, as Hamlet jests:
5
Despite his reputation for quietness, Seaman is
quick
-
witted
and bolshie with hecklers.
1
She was only sixteen, this
sharp
-
witted
little girl, and a beautiful blonde.
2
In the course of her account, she emerges as
sharp
-
witted
if occasionally haughty.
3
But she was
sharp
-
witted
,
and made the most of the situation even so.
4
He's
sharp
-
witted
,
but is apparently interested only in direct, quantifiable objectives.
5
In regard to other things he was
sharp
-
witted
above his fellows.
1
As a result, their insults are often
witty
,
literary and highly intelligent.
2
She is all vanity: fancies herself beautiful;
witty
;
in short, like you.
3
In modern times Pitt was grave; Fox, Melbourne, and Canning were
witty
.
4
I chuckled, convinced that I had just thought a particularly
witty
thought.
5
Are you sure about that one!' But he's quite
witty
and bright.
6
It was self-deprecating, sometimes angry, often
witty
- and a great success.
7
Though that's not the first time I have heard that
witty
comment.
8
They never say a
witty
thing; they never do a charming act.
9
A few playfully
witty
remarks on the subject will be the ideal.
10
The
witty
part of the matter was this: Ingersoli spoke of sin.
11
He was original and
witty
and was in demand for special occasions.
12
Now he's back with Paper Music, a
witty
,
gently subversive cine-concert evening.
13
All went well; Vivian wrote a pathetic prologue and a
witty
epilogue.
14
He is often
witty
,
but lately his humour has grown rather tiresome.
15
Food arrived and Penny continued to inject
witty
asides, plainly charming Boyle.
16
See how easy it is to offend you with a
witty
remark?
witty
very witty
so witty
as witty
witty man
more witty