Definitionn. ability to apply knowledge or experience or understanding or common sense and insight
Last update: October 12, 2015
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She saw them when they chose to call in the daytime, and regaled the glowering Mortimer at the dinner table with scraps of their sapience. [Please select]
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"The Wounded Cuirassier" and the "Chasseur of the Guard" are not documents of æsthetic history, but noble expressions of artistic sapience and personal feeling. [Please select]
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The public, which seldom has the knowledge, or the information, necessary for understanding business or financial complexities, usually remarks, with the archaic sapience of a Greek chorus, "There must be some fire where there is so much smoke." [Please select]
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When Zora explained that the coins were only used as counters and could be changed for notes at the rooms, he was astonished at her sapience. [Please select]
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With more sapience and less sensitiveness, Bouguereau is Lesueur's true successor, to say which is certainly not to affirm a very salient originality of the older painter. [Please select]
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