How do I pass multiple ints into a vector at once?

You can do it with initializer list:

std::vector<unsigned int> array;

// First argument is an iterator to the element BEFORE which you will insert:
// In this case, you will insert before the end() iterator, which means appending value
// at the end of the vector.
array.insert(array.end(), { 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 });

Try pass array to vector:

int arr[] = {2,5,8,11,14};
std::vector<int> TestVector(arr, arr+5);

You could always call std::vector::assign to assign array to vector, call std::vector::insert to add multiple arrays.

If you use C++11, you can try:

std::vector<int> v{2,5,8,11,14};

Or

 std::vector<int> v = {2,5,8,11,14};

You can also use vector::insert.

std::vector<int> v;
int a[5] = {2, 5, 8, 11, 14};

v.insert(v.end(), a, a+5);

Edit:

Of course, in real-world programming you should use:

v.insert(v.end(), a, a+(sizeof(a)/sizeof(a[0])));  // C++03
v.insert(v.end(), std::begin(a), std::end(a));     // C++11

using vector::insert (const_iterator position, initializer_list il); http://www.cplusplus.com/reference/vector/vector/insert/

#include <iostream>
#include <vector>

int main() {
  std::vector<int> vec;
  vec.insert(vec.end(),{1,2,3,4});
  return 0;
}