0 short form of intelligence: secret information, for example about another country's government, an enemy group, or criminal activities:
US intel officials say that many are already hiding in surrounding villages.
They considered that the questions would be easily intel- ligible.
Intel, for example, has spent 100 million dollars in developing the production of one component involving a new 32-bit micro-processor.
Intel was formed 26 years ago, when two men wrote a statement of intent a page and a half long and with it raised $2.3 million.
If it is not the same examination, it is perhaps an allied one with the addition of something called "intel- ligence" as well as reading, composition and arithmetic.
Intel- ligent people in the past invested their money not in savings banks or government defence bonds, but in buildings, machinery and companies, and they made money.