genius|geniuses in English
noun
[ge·ni·us || 'dʒɪːnɪəs]
great mental ability; one with great mental ability, very intelligent or talented person; great natural ability, talent
Use "genius|geniuses" in a sentence
1. No way you geniuses could've spotted this.
2. Geniuses are supposed to be eccentric and hopelessly impractical.
3. She only dates geniuses and Nobel Prize winners.
4. This is the greatest collection of geniuses ever assembled!
5. Is this the movie about babies that are geniuses?
6. The geniuses have done a bang-up job so far.
7. People considered geniuses are often described as Brilliant in this way
8. Hey, genius.
9. 19 Genius will not; unrewarded genius is almost a proverb.
10. I think that we are clinging to a great many piano tops in accepting yesterday’s fortuitous Contrivings as constituting the only means for solving a given problem.” “Everyone is born a genius, but the process of living de-geniuses them.”
11. Nice going, genius.
12. In the world, there are so many geniuses walking into grave unobtrusively every day.
13. Do something genius-Like.
14. Einstein was a genius.
15. His genius flowered early.
16. Hey, genius, you're no hero!
17. Genius is so often misunderstood.
18. 'Cause I'm a tactical genius.
19. The NWG was an Adhocracy of intensely creative, sleep-deprived, idiosyncratic, well-meaning computer geniuses
20. Greatest genius often lies concealed.
21. The genius and the Academician.
22. A genius twisted for evil.
23. Mozart was, all , not a mere purveyor of music but the supreme dramatic geniuses all time.
24. Einstein was a mathematical genius.
25. The film reveals Fellini's genius.