DICT.TW Dictionary Taiwan
216.73.216.135
Search for:
Search type:
Return Definitions
Match headwords exactly
Match prefixes
Match prefixes (skip, count)
Match substring occurring anywhere in a headword
Match suffixes
POSIX 1003.2 (modern) regular expressions
Old (basic) regular expressions
Match using SOUNDEX algorithm
Match headwords within Levenshtein distance one
Match separate words within headwords
Match the first word within headwords
Match the last word within headwords
Database:
Any
First match
DICT.TW English-Chinese Dictionary 英漢字典
DICT.TW English-Chinese Medical Dictionary 英漢醫學字典
DICT.TW 注音查詢、中文輸入法字典
Taiwan MOE computer dictionary
Network Terminology
MDBG CC-CEDICT Chinese-English Dictionary 漢英字典
Japanese-English Electronic Dictionary 和英電子辞書
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
WordNet (r) 2.0
Elements database 20001107
Easton's 1897 Bible Dictionary
Hitchcock's Bible Names Dictionary (late 1800's)
▼
[Show options]
[
Pronunciation
] [
Help
] [
Database Info
] [
Server Info
]
4 definitions found
From:
DICT.TW English-Chinese Dictionary 英漢字典
wit
/ˈwɪt/
機智,機警,智力,頭腦,理智,妙語,機智的人 ;(
v
.) 知道
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Wit
v.
t
. & i.
[
inf.
(
To
)
Wit
;
pres. sing.
Wot
;
pl.
Wite
;
imp.
Wist(e)
;
p. p.
Wist
;
p.
pr
. &
vb
. n.
Wit(t)ing
.
See
the
Note
below
.]
To
know
;
to
learn
.
“I
wot
and
wist
alway.”
Note:
☞
The
present
tense
was
inflected
as
follows
;
sing
. 1st
pers
.
wot
; 2d
pers
.
wost
,
or
wot(t)est
; 3d
pers
.
wot
,
or
wot(t)eth
;
pl
.
witen
,
or
wite
.
The
following
variant
forms
also
occur
;
pres
.
sing
. 1st & 3d
pers
.
wat
,
woot
;
pres
.
pl
.
wyten
,
or
wyte
,
weete
,
wote
,
wot
;
imp
.
wuste
(
Southern
dialect
);
p
.
pr
.
wotting
.
Later
,
other
variant
or
corrupt
forms
are
found
,
as
,
in
Shakespeare
, 3d
pers
.
sing
.
pres
.
wots
.
Brethren
,
we
do
you
to
wit
[
make
you
to
know
]
of
the
grace
of
God
bestowed
on
the
churches
of
Macedonia
.
--
2
Cor
.
viii
. 1.
Thou
wost
full
little
what
thou
meanest
.
--
Chaucer
.
We
witen
not
what
thing
we
prayen
here
.
--
Chaucer
.
When
that
the
sooth
in
wist
.
--
Chaucer
.
Note:
☞
This
verb
is
now
used
only
in
the
infinitive
,
to
wit
,
which
is
employed
,
especially
in
legal
language
,
to
call
attention
to
a
particular
thing
,
or
to
a
more
particular
specification
of
what
has
preceded
,
and
is
equivalent
to
namely
,
that
is
to
say
.
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Wit
n.
1.
Mind
;
intellect
;
understanding
;
sense
.
Who
knew
the
wit
of
the
Lord
?
or
who
was
his
counselor?
--
Wyclif
(
Rom
.
xi
. 34).
A
prince
most
prudent
,
of
an
excellent
And
unmatched
wit
and
judgment
. --
Shak
.
Will
puts
in
practice
what
wit
deviseth
.
--
Sir
J
.
Davies
.
He
wants
not
wit
the
dander
to
decline
.
--
Dryden
.
2.
A
mental
faculty
,
or
power
of
the
mind
; --
used
in
this
sense
chiefly
in
the
plural
,
and
in
certain
phrases
;
as
,
to
lose
one's
wits
;
at
one's
wits'
end
,
and
the
like
.
“Men's
wittes
ben
so
dull.”
I
will
stare
him
out
of
his
wits
.
--
Shak
.
3.
Felicitous
association
of
objects
not
usually
connected
,
so
as
to
produce
a
pleasant
surprise
;
also
.
the
power
of
readily
combining
objects
in
such
a
manner
.
The
definition
of
wit
is
only
this
,
that
it
is
a
propriety
of
thoughts
and
words
;
or
,
in
other
terms
,
thoughts
and
words
elegantly
adapted
to
the
subject
.
--
Dryden
.
Wit
which
discovers
partial
likeness
hidden
in
general
diversity
.
--
Coleridge
.
Wit
lying
most
in
the
assemblage
of
ideas
,
and
putting
those
together
with
quickness
and
variety
wherein
can
be
found
any
resemblance
or
congruity
,
thereby
to
make
up
pleasant
pictures
in
the
fancy
.
--
Locke
.
4.
A
person
of
eminent
sense
or
knowledge
;
a
man
of
genius
,
fancy
,
or
humor
;
one
distinguished
for
bright
or
amusing
sayings
,
for
repartee
,
and
the
like
.
In
Athens
,
where
books
and
wits
were
ever
busier
than
in
any
other
part
of
Greece
,
I
find
but
only
two
sorts
of
writings
which
the
magistrate
cared
to
take
notice
of
;
those
either
blasphemous
and
atheistical
,
or
libelous
.
--
Milton
.
Intemperate
wits
will
spare
neither
friend
nor
foe
.
--
L'Estrange
.
A
wit
herself
,
Amelia
weds
a
wit
.
--
Young
.
The five wits
,
the
five
senses
;
also
,
sometimes
,
the
five
qualities
or
faculties
,
common
wit
,
imagination
,
fantasy
,
estimation
,
and
memory
.
But
my
five wits
nor
my
five
senses
can
Dissuade
one
foolish
heart
from
serving
thee
. --
Shak
.
Syn:
--
Ingenuity
;
humor
;
satire
;
sarcasm
;
irony
;
burlesque
.
Usage:
--
Wit
,
Humor
.
Wit
primarily
meant
mind
;
and
now
denotes
the
power
of
seizing
on
some
thought
or
occurrence
,
and
,
by
a
sudden
turn
,
presenting
it
under
aspects
wholly
new
and
unexpected
--
apparently
natural
and
admissible
,
if
not
perfectly
just
,
and
bearing
on
the
subject
,
or
the
parties
concerned
,
with
a
laughable
keenness
and
force
.
“What
I
want,”
said
a
pompous
orator
,
aiming
at
his
antagonist
,
“is
common
sense.”
“
Exactly
!”
was
the
whispered
reply
.
The
pleasure
we
find
in
wit
arises
from
the
ingenuity
of
the
turn
,
the
sudden
surprise
it
brings
,
and
the
patness
of
its
application
to
the
case
,
in
the
new
and
ludicrous
relations
thus
flashed
upon
the
view
.
Humor
is
a
quality
more
congenial
to
the
English
mind
than
wit
.
It
consists
primarily
in
taking
up
the
peculiarities
of
a
humorist
(
or
eccentric
person
)
and
drawing
them
out
,
as
Addison
did
those
of
Sir
Roger
de
Coverley
,
so
that
we
enjoy
a
hearty
,
good-natured
laugh
at
his
unconscious
manifestation
of
whims
and
oddities
.
From
this
original
sense
the
term
has
been
widened
to
embrace
other
sources
of
kindly
mirth
of
the
same
general
character
.
In
a
well-known
caricature
of
English
reserve
,
an
Oxford
student
is
represented
as
standing
on
the
brink
of
a
river
,
greatly
agitated
at
the
sight
of
a
drowning
man
before
him
,
and
crying
out
,
“O
that
I
had
been
introduced
to
this
gentleman
,
that
I
might
save
his
life!”
The
“Silent Woman”
of
Ben
Jonson
is
one
of
the
most
humorous
productions
,
in
the
original
sense
of
the
term
,
which
we
have
in
our
language
.
◄
►
From:
WordNet (r) 2.0
wit
n
1:
a
message
whose
ingenuity
or
verbal
skill
or
incongruity
has
the
power
to
evoke
laughter
[
syn
:
humor
,
humour
,
witticism
,
wittiness
]
2:
mental
ability
; "
he's
got
plenty
of
brains
but
no
common
sense
" [
syn
:
brain
,
brainpower
,
learning ability
, {
mental
capacity
,
mentality
]
3:
a
witty
amusing
person
who
makes
jokes
[
syn
:
wag
,
card
]
DICT.TW
About DICT.TW
•
Contact Webmaster
•
Index
•
Links