Intuitive is an adjective meaning gained or based on what seems to be true instinctively, without needing conscious reasoning. It often describes knowledge, insights, or approaches that arise from snap judgments or subconscious understanding rather than step-by-step analysis. In common usage, it conveys ease of use or natural comprehension. (2-4 sentences, 50-80 words).
- Use bullet points • You’ll notice many non-native speakers misplace stress on the first syllable or split the /tuː/ into two syllables. Correct by practicing in-TU-i-tive with a single, extended /tuː/ and a smooth /ɪ/ leading into /tɪv/. • Another error is trimming the /ɪ/ in the third syllable; say the sequence clearly: in-TU-i-tiv, not in-TU-tiv. • Finally, some drop the /v/ or make it a softer /f/; keep voicing for /v/ and end with a clean bilabial closure.
US vs UK vs AU: US often shows a stronger, almost flat /ɪ/ in the first vowel and a more pronounced /ˈtuː/; UK uses /tjuː/ with the /j/ onset more evident and a slightly longer final /ɪv/; AU mirrors UK but with subtly different vowel qualities in /ɪ/ and /uː/. All share the stressed second syllable. IPA: US /ɪnˈtuːɪtɪv/, UK /ɪnˈtjuːɪtɪv/, AU /ɪnˈtjuːɪtɪv/. Tips: keep jaw relaxed, lips neutral to rounded for /uː/, and practice the /tj/ sequence as a single blend.
"Her intuitive sense told her exactly where to look for the missing key."
"The software has an intuitive interface that even beginners can navigate."
"Scientists rely on intuitive leaps as a supplement to formal experiments."
"An intuitive listener can pick up on unspoken cues during a conversation."
Intuitive comes from the adjective intuitive, itself derived from Latin intueri ‘to look at, to contemplate’ with the prefix in- meaning ‘in, upon’ and the suffix -ive, which forms adjectives. The Latin verb intueri fused with French-intuitif in the medieval period, entering English by the 16th century to denote perception by immediate apprehension rather than rational deduction. The core sense evolved from touching upon something directly with the mind to describing faculties or tools that feel, look, or operate in a way that suggests immediate understanding. In modern usage, intuitive broadly covers user-centered design, decision-making that feels natural, and knowledge presumed to be self-evident once experienced. Over time, the term expanded from philosophical and cognitive psychology contexts to everyday technology and UX, where “intuitive” signals a low cognitive load and quick comprehension. First known use in English appears in early modern scientific and philosophical writings, then proliferated in 20th-century design discourse, culminating in today’s widespread favor when describing interfaces, processes, and ideation that seem obvious without formal training.
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💡 These words have similar meanings to "Intuitive" and can often be used interchangeably.
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Words that rhyme with "Intuitive"
-ive sounds
Practice with these rhyming pairs to improve your pronunciation consistency:
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Pronounce as in-TYOO-i-tiv with the primary stress on the second syllable. IPA: US /ɪnˈtuːɪtɪv/, UK /ɪnˈtjuːɪtɪv/, AU /ɪnˈtjuːɪtɪv/. Start with a short /ɪ/ then /n/ + stressed /ˈtuː/ (like 'two' but longer), followed by /ɪ/ and /tɪv/. The sequence blends: in-TU-i-tiv. Keep the tongue close to the palate for the /tjuː/ cluster, and avoid a separate, hard /j/ glide; rather, the /tjuː/ is a tight, single syllable onset.
Common errors: 1) Misplacing stress on the first syllable (in-TU-i-tive vs in-TU-i-tive). 2) Slurring the /tuː/ into a simple /tu/ or mispronouncing /ˈtuː/ as /tj/ sequences. 3) Deleting the second syllable vowel sound, saying /ɪnˈtjuːtɪv/ too abruptly. Correction: emphasize the /ˈtuː/ with a longer tense vowel, ensure you glide into the /ɪ/ rather than cutting it short, and keep the final /v/ sound soft but audible.
US: /ɪnˈtuːɪtɪv/ with rhotic /r/ absent; UK: /ɪnˈtjuːɪtɪv/ with a slight /j/ onset in /tjuː/; AU: /ɪnˈtjuːɪtɪv/ similar to UK, often with a more clipped final /ɪv/. The key differences are how the /tj/ is realized: US tends to a clear /tuː/ chunk, UK leans toward /tjuː/ with a subtle y-glide, and AU mirrors UK but with nascent vowel quality variations in /ɪ/ and /ɪv/. Practicing minimal pairs across accents helps lock the subtle rhotics and vowel shifts.
It blends a tense, long /ˈtuː/ vowel with a rapid nucleus /ɪ/ and an ending /tɪv/. The tricky parts are the /tuː/ onset (a strong, stressed vowel cluster) and the /t/ plus final /v/ transition, which requires precise voicing and lip tension. You also must sustain the second syllable vowel without reducing it. Practicing the sequence in slow motion helps you connect the /tuː/ with /ɪ/ and /v/ more cleanly.
The word challenges you with a high-mid back vowel in the stressed syllable and a lateral glide into /ɪ/ before the final /v/, plus the compound /tjuː/ cluster. This creates a nuanced jaw positioning: part-closed lips for /t/, slight lip rounding for /uː/, and relaxed lips for /v/. The coarticulation between /t/ and /juː/ requires a controlled, light tongue contact to avoid producing an extra syllable or an abrupt stop.
🗣️ Voice search tip: These questions are optimized for voice search. Try asking your voice assistant any of these questions about "Intuitive"!
- Shadowing: listen to a native speaker saying 'intuitive' and repeat in real-time, matching rhythm and intonation. - Minimal pairs: compare intuitive with invasive, intuitive vs inventive; focus on the /tuːɪ/ vs /tjuːɪ/ sequences. - Rhythm: mark syllable-timed feel; stress on the second syllable; practice tapping between syllables. - Stress: hold /ˈtuː/ slightly longer than /ɪ/; pause naturally between /ɪ/ and /tɪv/. - Recording: record, compare to a reference, adjust mouth positions. - Context practice: say sentences like “An intuitive interface saves time.” and “Her intuitive grasp surprised the researchers.”
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