Intelligent adjective in British English (smt). Crafty, like in business; smart or brilliant. Speak fast, witty and often impertinent. Although smart is most often used to describe someone who is intelligent, you can also call someone an elegant and elegant dresser or an intelligent and daring wise man.
And increasingly intelligent navigation aids in the cockpit brought much more precision and efficiency to route planning. A woman in a fancy uniform scribbles tickets for a growing line of tourists eager to take a trip on the old-fashioned train. While Amazon continues to lead the smart speaker market, both Google and Apple have the advantage of having their voice assistants integrated into smartphones. The structures are made of “smart glass” that makes them opaque after a user enters and closes the door.
Not all of these shows are good, some are pretty bad, actually, but you might feel smart about watching them anyway. These example sentences are automatically selected from various online news sources to reflect the current usage of the word “smart”. In May, and again this fall, the district launched “smart buses with Wi-Fi access points” in areas without reliable Internet access. Then, summoning an intelligent young jemadar with whom he had talked a lot during the trip, he asked him to read the chit.
Leave a Comment