innate
/ɪˈneɪt/ (bre, ipa) · /ɪˈneɪt/ (ame, ipa) · /i-ˈnāt ˈi-ˌnāt/ (ame, mw)
innate — 形容詞
- innatepositive
- more innatecomparative
- most innatesuperlative
1. describes a quality, skill, or characteristic that a person or animal naturally
與生俱來的
生來就有的特質或能力
describes a quality, skill, or characteristic that a person or animal naturally has from birth, rather than one gained through training, education, or experience
Dylan has an innate sense of rhythm that makes him a brilliant drummer.
Dylan 天生就有節奏感,這讓他成為出色的鼓手。
collocation: innate sense of [rhythm, direction, etc.]
The ability to recognise faces appears to be innate in human babies.
辨認臉孔的能力在人類嬰兒身上似乎是與生俱來的。
pattern: be innate in [someone/something]
Nila's innate curiosity about plants and insects led her to become a biologist.
Nila 對植物和昆蟲天生的好奇心,引領她成為生物學家。
Some birds use an innate sense of direction to migrate across entire landmasses.
有些鳥類會利用天生的方向感飛越整片大陸。
- inborn
essentially synonymous but slightly less common; tends toward biological or hereditary traits (e.g. an inborn disease)
- natural
far more frequent in everyday speech; broader — can also describe things achieved without effort (e.g. a natural leader)
- instinctive
shifts focus to automatic, unlearned behaviour (reflexes, gut reactions) rather than stable qualities or abilities
文法句型
be innate in [someone/something]
an innate [quality/ability/characteristic]
用法筆記
Frequently used with nouns such as ability, sense, talent, quality, and curiosity. In everyday conversation, natural is far more common than innate — use innate when you want to emphasise that something is present from birth rather than developed.