SMART vs ASTUTE: NOUN
- A dandy; one who affects smartness in dress; also, one who affects briskness, vivacity, or cleverness.
- Same as smart-money: as, to pay the smart.
- Sharp pain or anguish.
- Intelligence; expertise.
- Hence, mental pain or suffering of any kind; pungent grief; affliction.
- A sharp, quick, lively pain; especially, a pricking local pain, as the pain from the sting of nettles.
- A kind of pain such as that caused by a wound or a burn or a sore
- N/A
SMART vs ASTUTE: ADJECTIVE
- Impertinent; insolent.
- Amusingly clever; witty.
- Canny and shrewd in dealings with others.
- Energetic or quick in movement.
- Having or showing intelligence; bright. : intelligent.
- Marked by smartness in dress and manners
- Fashionable; elegant: : fashionable.
- Capable of making adjustments that resemble those resulting from human decisions, chiefly by means of electronic sensors and computer technology.
- Improperly forward or bold
- Elegant and stylish
- Characterized by quickness and ease in learning
- Showing mental alertness and calculation and resourcefulness
- Causing a smart; pungent; pricking.
- Keen; severe; poignant.
- Shrewd or crafty
- Quickly and critically discerning
- Critically discerning; sagacious; shrewd; subtle; crafty.
- Having or showing shrewdness and discernment, especially with respect to one's own concerns. : shrewd.
- Marked by practical hardheaded intelligence
SMART vs ASTUTE: VERB
- Be the source of pain
- N/A
SMART vs ASTUTE: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To suffer acutely, as from mental distress, wounded feelings, or remorse.
- To feel such a pain.
- To be the location of such a pain.
- To cause a sharp, usually superficial, stinging pain.
- To feel a lively, pungent local pain; -- said of some part of the body as the seat of irritation.
- To feel a pungent pain of mind; to feel sharp pain or grief; to suffer; to feel the sting of evil.
- N/A
SMART vs ASTUTE: OTHER WORD TYPES
- To cause a smart or sharp pain; cause suffering or distress.
- Careful; punctual; quick.
- Fashionable; stylish; brilliant.
- Keen, as in bargain-making; sharp, and often of questionable honesty; well able to take care of one's own interests.
- Quick; active; intelligent; clever: as, a smart business man.
- Elaborately nice; elegant; fine; showy: noting articles of dress.
- Dressed in an elaborately nice or showy manner; well-dressed; spruce.
- Brisk; vivacious; lively; witty; especially, sharp and impertinent, or pert and forward, rather than genuinely witty: noting persons.
- Forcible; earnest.
- Brisk; lively; fresh: as, a smart breeze.
- Marked by or executed with force or vigor; vigorous; efficient; sharp; severe: as, a smart blow; a smart skirmish; a smart walk.
- Sharp; keen; poignant: applied to physical or mental pain or suffering.
- Causing a smart or sharp pain; especially, causing a pricking local pain; pungent; stinging.
- A contracted form of smarteth, third person singular present indicative of smart.
- Smartly; vigorously; quickly; sharp.
- To feel a lively, pungent pain; also, to be the seat of a pungent local pain, as from some piercing or irritating application; be acutely painful: often used impersonally.
- To feel mental pain or suffering of any kind; suffer; be distressed; suffer evil consequences; bear a penalty.
- To cause a smart or pain to or in; cause to smart.
- Acute and pertinent; witty; especially, marked by a sharpness winch is nearer to pertness or impertinence than to genuine wit; superficially witty: noting remarks, writings, etc.: as, a smart reply; a smart saying.
- Capable of independent and apparently intelligent action
- Quick and brisk
- Painfully severe
- Up to the mark; well turned out; creditable.
- Swift-sailing, as a vessel: in distinction from able, stanch, or seaworthy.
- In good health; well; not sick.
- Considerable; large; as, a right smart distance.
- Having strong qualities; strong.
- (idiom) (right smart) A lot; a considerable amount.
- Synonyms Sagacious, Sage, Knowing, Astute, Subtle. Sagacious and sage are used only in good senses, and when applied to persons generally suggest the wisdom of age or experience. The knowing man has wide knowledge and often penetration. The word knowing has also a humorous cast: as, he gave me a knowing wink; it may be used ironically: as, he is a little too knowing, that is, he thinks he knows more than he does; it may be used of knowing more than one has a right to know; it sometimes suggests a disposition to make ill use of knowledge: as, a knowing leer. Astute is often the same as sagacious, but is susceptible of an unfavorable sense in the direction of a narrow shrewdness, slyness, or cunning; it often means a sagacity that knows how to be silent; it is frequently applied to looks. Subtle, in its good sense, implies great acuteness, delicacy, or refinement in mental action: as, a subtle reasoner. For its bad sense, see cunning.
- Of keen penetration or discernment; cunning; sagacious.
SMART vs ASTUTE: RELATED WORDS
- Impudent, Dapper, Chic, Cagey, Natty, Fashionable, Sharp, Bright, Snappy, Stylish, Astute, Canny, Shrewd, Clever, Intelligent
- Judicious, Cunning, Intelligent, Crafty, Clever, Insightful, Incisive, Skilful, Skillful, Adroit, Perceptive, Canny, Sharp, Smart, Shrewd
SMART vs ASTUTE: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Impudent, Dapper, Chic, Cagey, Natty, Fashionable, Sharp, Bright, Snappy, Stylish, Astute, Canny, Shrewd, Clever, Intelligent
- Judicious, Cunning, Intelligent, Crafty, Clever, Insightful, Incisive, Skilful, Skillful, Adroit, Perceptive, Canny, Sharp, Smart, Shrewd
SMART vs ASTUTE: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Smart Pass through Smart Pass menu on your Emirates NBD Mobile Banking App.
- Alexa is smart, but is she the best smart home assistant for you?
- Some SMART apps might offer more than one context or user interface that can be accessed during the SMART launch.
- Utilize smart locks: As building technology becomes more sophisticated, the number of smart lock solutions has continued to grow.
- Suning Launched Its First Smart Retail Experience Center, Aiming to Build the Landmark of Smart Lifestyle.
- This SMART goals page contains tips, study material, a SMART KPI handbook, and many examples.
- These wearables include smart watches, wristbands, monitoring patches, and smart textiles.
- Smart decision by a very smart young man.
- In this case, each system involves other systems in other domains, such as Smart Factory with Smart City, Smart City with Smart Home.
- Utilizing smart lockboxes, smart locks and smart home technology, prospective renters can perform agentless touring in a secure environment using unique access codes.
- Union members are astute about the UI program.
- They are pragmatic, legally astute and client centric.
- Read more about working at RSM Astute Consulting.
- He is remembered as an astute business man.
- Crossly darwinistic fleming was the devoutly astute pyro.
- Astute risk management acts as a defense mechanism.
- Banks was such an astute and inventive collector.
- Wide is British slang for unscrupulous and astute.
- "HMS Astute, as Hon Members will know, is the first of the eponymous Astute Class submarines of Her Majesty's Royal Navy.
- Following a rigorous vendor evaluation process, BA chose Astute Agent from Astute Solutions to help achieve these objectives.
SMART vs ASTUTE: QUESTIONS
- Do the Paulk Smart router table&fence work with the Smart total?
- Do I need to pair my smart keyboard folio or Smart Keyboard?
- Can I Pasaload to smart or Smart Bro prepaid subscribers with MyHome?
- How much does it cost to install SMART SMART home technology?
- Are there any smart car body kits for the Smart Fortwo?
- What is the link between smart cities and Smart Mobility?
- Why do people drink smart drinks and take smart drugs?
- Who can switch from smart postpaid to SMART signature?
- Which smart controllers work with what smart home systems?
- What is smart rendering in TMPGEnc MPEG smart renderer?
- Who are some of the most astute KGO talk show hosts?
- Is the Royal Navy's new Astute nuclear submarine safe?
- What happened at the HMS Astute shooting in Southampton?
- Are keirin riders more tactically astute than sprint cyclists?
- How to make astute decisions about government bonds?
- Should nursing professionals be politically astute?