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Thinker   /θˈɪŋkər/   Listen
Thinker

noun
1.
An important intellectual.  Synonyms: creative thinker, mind.
2.
Someone who exercises the mind (usually in an effort to reach a decision).



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"Thinker" Quotes from Famous Books



... Philosophic type, the hand of the thinker and philosopher, the usual position of the Line of Mentality is long and sloping, but if found straight or level it indicates a mental development of the logical and practical qualities which might not be expected in such a class ...
— Palmistry for All • Cheiro

... physique, too, he was totally unlike the ordinary Parisian type. He was a young athlete, vigorous, robust, broad-shouldered, tanned by sun and wind. Only his blue eye—so subtle, melancholy, passionate—revealed the artist and the thinker. ...
— The History of David Grieve • Mrs. Humphry Ward

... forms of mythology, which he uses as symbols or translates into figures of speech. He has no implements of observation, such as the telescope or microscope; the great science of chemistry is a blank to him. It is only by an effort that the modern thinker can breathe the atmosphere of the ancient philosopher, or understand how, under such unequal conditions, he seems in many instances, by a sort of inspiration, to have ...
— Timaeus • Plato

... mansion whose door was plated with copper.[FN525] I stood behind the door, whilst the old woman cried out in Persian, and ere I knew it a damsel ran up with light and nimble step. She had tucked up her trousers to her knees, so that I saw a pair of calves that confounded thinker and lighter, and the maid herself was as saith the ...
— The Book of the Thousand Nights and a Night, Volume 2 • Richard F. Burton

... currency with instinctive readiness. Two things had made him clearly the intellectual superior of his fellows—the advantages of his early years by which he learned to read, and the habit of meditation which the solitude of his stricken life induced. This had made him a thinker, a philosopher far more profound than his general attainments would naturally produce. With the super-sensitiveness which always characterizes the afflicted, also, he had become a most acute and subtle observer of the human countenance, and read its infinite variety of expression ...
— Bricks Without Straw • Albion W. Tourgee


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