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Perspicacity   Listen
Perspicacity

noun
1.
Intelligence manifested by being astute (as in business dealings).  Synonyms: astuteness, perspicaciousness, shrewdness.
2.
The capacity to assess situations or circumstances shrewdly and to draw sound conclusions.  Synonyms: judgement, judgment, sound judgement, sound judgment.






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"Perspicacity" Quotes from Famous Books



... work pen in hand, and he proposed to the illustrious astronomer some queries, which proved both his infinite perspicacity, and wonderful variety of knowledge. Bailly then felt the necessity of developing some ideas which in his History of Ancient Astronomy were only accessories to his principal subject. This was the object ...
— Biographies of Distinguished Scientific Men • Francois Arago

... social reconstruction now came clearly into view; and what a base! An official Supreme Being, and a regulated Terror. The one was to fill up the spiritual void, and the other to satisfy all the exigencies of temporal things. It is to the credit of Robespierre's perspicacity that he should have recognised the human craving for religion, but this credit is as naught when we contemplate the jejune thing that passed for religion in his dim and narrow understanding. Rousseau had brought a new soul into ...
— Critical Miscellanies (Vol. 1 of 3) - Essay 1: Robespierre • John Morley

... underling Peter Flash for Sir Walter Raleigh; and the immaculate Celestina, who escapes by stratagem and force of virtue from the villanous designs of Shakespeare, for the lady long since indicated by the perspicacity of a Chalmers as the object of that lawless and desperate passion which found utterance in the sonnets of her unprincipled admirer—Queen Elizabeth. As a previous suggestion of my own, to the effect that George Peele was probably the real author of "Romeo and Juliet," has had the singular ...
— The Age of Shakespeare • Algernon Charles Swinburne

... that he is not the peer of Francis of Assisi. But if Francis's judgment of men was so imperfect as to permit him to appoint an ambitious intriguer of the stamp of Brother Elias his deputy, we have no right to be sanguine about the perspicacity of Mr. Booth ...
— Evolution and Ethics and Other Essays • Thomas H. Huxley

... his Tatlers and Spectators. Most of those papers have some merit; many are very lively and amusing; but there is not a single one which could be passed off as Addison's on a critic of the smallest perspicacity. ...
— Critical and Historical Essays Volume 2 • Thomas Babington Macaulay


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