I think you are asking if the adverb completely can modify the adjective intelligent. My answer would be that it can, in certain circumstances, but I would be wary of using it.
I would not use it as a description of a person. 'Mary is completely intelligent' does not sound right. You would be more likely to say 'Mary is very intelligent' or 'Mary is highly intelligent'. As a negative, you might say 'Mary is intelligent in some ways' rather than 'Mary is not completely intelligent'.
'Completely intelligent' would work better as a description of a remark or an action, used sarcastically or humorously.
'Leaving that open tin of paint in the middle of the floor wasn't a completely intelligent thing to do, was it?'
But on the whole, I think it best to avoid that combination of words altogether.
You need to define, "completely dead" in order to receive an intelligent answer.
50% 50% girls and boys are intelligent in their own way a boy or a girl could come up with the next best thing
The meaning to the terms business intelligent can come from many sources. Most of which can find come from officer type levels where it is deemed that they are not the brightest in the company. It is thought that the intelligence of a company starts at the bottom and works its way up.
We dragons are sentient creatures, as are humans. We are highly intelligent. To get one of us to come to you, we have to see you as trustworthy enough to show ourselves to you.
The comparative and superlative forms of intelligent are more intelligent and most intelligent.
Go to school. Be at least semi-intelligent. There isn't a magical trick to tell you if what you are writing is completely correct. You just have to know.
It's completely random.
No! it is completely impossible!
Almost all animals have some sort of intelligence. Aka a fish may come off as stupid (Goldfish) but if they were stupid they couldn't swim So it depends to a certain extent of how intelligent they are
If it has a distributor it has to come out and be completely disassembled //its under the rotor!!!
"Intelligent" doesn't have a comparative and superlative form. Instead, you would say "more intelligent" or "most intelligent."
Intelligent can be said as "clever" or "smart".