0 past simple and past participle of intuit --
1 to know or understand something because of a feeling that you have rather than because of facts or what someone has told you: --
[ + that ] He intuited that I was worried about the situation.
When examining a landscape, scale can be intuited from trees, houses and cars.
They can only be made intelligible by being intuited or perceived.
He intuited that natural science was struggling to overcome a traditional ontology of timeless material substances, because it does not suit natural phenomena.
Using valid arguments, we can deduce from intuited premises.
The locals feared her, having intuited that she was a witch.
This sense of wholeness, of all the parts of the work coalescing, can only be intuited.
How few of us have, in fact, ever properly intuited the mood of nature in a really wild place without being interrupted at some point by other people!
Hence, we can only express or point to both what is intuited and its relation to the self that intuits through symbols which gesture past themselves.