Gossip vs Intelligent - What's the difference?
gossip | intelligent |
Someone who likes to talk about someone else’s private or personal business.
Idle talk about someone’s private or personal matters, especially someone not present.
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*:"I ought to arise and go forth with timbrels and with dances; but, do you know, I am not inclined to revels? There has been a little—just a very little bit too much festivity so far …. Not that I don't adore dinners and gossip and dances; not that I do not love to pervade bright and glittering places."
A genre in contemporary media, usually focused on the personal affairs of celebrities.
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*:Little disappointed, then, she turned attention to "Chat of the Social World," gossip which exercised potent fascination upon the girl's intelligence. She devoured with more avidity than she had her food those pretentiously phrased chronicles of the snobocracydistilling therefrom an acid envy that robbed her napoleon of all its savour.
(lb) A sponsor; a godfather or godmother.
*(John Selden) (1584-1654)
*:Should a great lady that was invited to be a gossip , in her place send her kitchen maid, 'twould be ill taken.
To talk about someone else's private or personal business, especially in a way that spreads the information.
To talk idly.
Of high or especially quick cognitive capacity, bright.
*{{quote-book, year=1927, author=
, chapter=5, title= Well thought-out, well considered.
Characterized by thoughtful interaction.
Having the same level of brain power as mankind.
Having an environment-sensing automatically-invoked built-in computer capability.
As a noun gossip
is someone who likes to talk about someone else’s private or personal business.As a verb gossip
is to talk about someone else's private or personal business, especially in a way that spreads the information.As an adjective intelligent is
of high or especially quick cognitive capacity, bright.gossip
English
(wikipedia gossip)Noun
(en noun)Synonyms
* scuttle-butt * See alsoVerb
Synonyms
* (sense, talk about someone else's private or personal business) blab, talk out of turn, tell tales out of schoolReferences
* ----intelligent
English
Alternative forms
* entelligentAdjective
(en-adj)F. E. Penny
Pulling the Strings, passage=Anstruther laughed good-naturedly. “[…] I shall take out half a dozen intelligent maistries from our Press and get them to give our villagers instruction when they begin work and when they are in the fields.”}}