释义 |
clueful, a. Brit. |ˈkluːf(ʊ)l|, U.S. |ˈkluf(ə)l| [‹ clue n. + -ful suffix, in sense 2 after clueless adj.] 1. Full of clues; informative, revealing. rare.
1921B. Ruck Sweet Stranger vi. 75, I went on reading aloud, quickly but distinctly, that pregnant, that possibly-so-clueful letter. 2. Well informed, knowledgeable. Cf. clueless adj. b.
1943Amer. Sociol. Rev. 8 521/2 The clueful inquiry into social ideologies and the sociology of knowledge. 1961Times 18 Nov. 1/3 (advt.) Bachelor, thirties, presentable and clueful, seeks worthwhile position now. 2002M. D. Bauer Building Secure Servers with Linux xi. 365 Maybe your experience is different from mine, but clueful human network engineers are rare enough; why would robotic ones be any less so? |