| intro- |
inward; into; in. |
| introduce |
to present (a person) to one or more people. [6 definitions] |
| introduction |
the act or process of introducing. [5 definitions] |
| introductory |
serving to introduce. |
| introit |
the beginning of the Roman Catholic mass, consisting of a psalm or hymn, and antiphon. [2 definitions] |
| intromit |
to allow, cause, or assist to enter; introduce; admit. |
| introrse |
in botany, facing inward; turned toward the center. (Cf. extrorse.) |
| introspect |
to examine or consider one's own thoughts, feelings, and sensations. |
| introspection |
examination of one's own thoughts, emotions, and sensations; self-scrutiny. |
| introspective |
looking inward and examining one's own thoughts or feelings, or tending to do so. |
| introversion |
the tendency to pay more attention to oneself than to others or the external world. (Cf. extraversion.) |
| introvert |
someone who tends to pay more attention to his or her own thoughts and feelings than to other people or subjects. (Cf. extrovert.) [4 definitions] |
| intrude |
to enter or thrust oneself in when not invited or welcomed. [2 definitions] |
| intrusion |
the act of intruding, or the state of being intruded upon. [2 definitions] |
| intrusive |
bothersome and unwelcome; intruding or apt to intrude. |
| intrust |
variant of entrust. |
| in truth |
in fact; actually. |
| intuit |
to know or apprehend directly, without a process of logical thought. |
| intuitable |
combined form of intuit. |
| intuition |
the power of knowing or apprehending something directly, without learning it consciously or submitting it to processes of logic. [3 definitions] |
| intuitive |
of or pertaining to intuition. [3 definitions] |