FEELS vs SENSE: NOUN
- Feelings.
- Plural form of feel.
- The general atmosphere of a place or situation and the effect that it has on people
- A property perceived by touch
- An intuitive awareness
- Manual-genital stimulation for sexual pleasure
- An intuitive or acquired perception or ability to estimate.
- A vague feeling or presentiment.
- Recognition or perception either through the senses or through the intellect; consciousness.
- Natural understanding or intelligence, especially in practical matters.
- The normal ability to think or reason soundly.
- A meaning that is conveyed, as in speech or writing; signification.
- One of the meanings of a word or phrase.
- Intellectual interpretation, as of the significance of an event or the conclusions reached by a group.
- A capacity to appreciate or understand.
- The faculties of sensation as means of providing physical gratification and pleasure.
- A perception or feeling produced by a stimulus; sensation.
- Any of the faculties by which stimuli from outside or inside the body are received and felt, as the faculties of hearing, sight, smell, touch, taste, and equilibrium.
- Sound practical judgment
- The meaning of a word or expression; the way in which a word or expression or situation can be interpreted
- A natural appreciation or ability
- A general conscious awareness
- The faculty through which the external world is apprehended
- Judgment; consensus.
- The intention, thought, feeling, or meaning of a body of persons, as an assembly; judgment, opinion, determination, or will in reference to a debated question.
- Meaning; import; signification; the conception that a word or sign is intended to convey.
- Discriminative perception; appreciation; a state of mind the result of a mental judgment or valuation.
- A faculty, possessed by animals, of perceiving external objects by means of impressions made upon certain organs (sensory or sense organs) of the body, or of perceiving changes in the condition of the body. See Muscular sense, under muscular, and Temperature sense, under temperature.
- Perception by the sensory organs of the body; sensation; sensibility; feeling.
- Perception through the intellect; apprehension; recognition; understanding; discernment; appreciation.
- Acuteness of perception or apprehension; discernment.
- Good judgment approaching sagacity; sound practical intelligence.
- Sound or clear mind.
- That which is wise, judicious, sound, sensible, or intelligent, and accords with sound reason: as, to talk sense.
- A power of perceiving relations of a particular kind; a capacity of being affected by certain non-sensuous qualities of objects; a special kind of discernment; also, an exertion of such a power: as, the religious sense; the sense of duty; the sense of humor.
- Feeling; immediate consciousness; sensation perceived as inward or subjective, or, at least, not decidedly as objective; also, vague consciousness or feeling.
- A special faculty of sensation connected with a bodily organ; the mode of sensation awakened by the excitation of a peripheral nerve.
- The capacity of being the subject of sensation and perception; the mode of consciousness by which an object is apprehended which acts upon the mind through the senses; the capacity of becoming conscious of objects as actually now and here; sense-perception; mental activity directly concerned in sensations.
- Specifically, the sense whose organ is the semicircular canals and vestibule of the internal ear, the portion of the internal ear supplied by the vestibular branch of the acoustic nerve. For the most part, this organ appears to function refiexly, that is, is not an organ of sense; but it undoubtedly gives us the sensation of dizziness or giddiness, and some authors refer this sensation to the ampullæ of the canals, and ascribe to the vestibule a second sensation, that of pressure.
- Sound perception and reasoning; correct judgment; good mental capacity; understanding; also, that which is sound, true, or reasonable; rational meaning.
- The simplest type of concrete affective experience; a complex of a sensation (or a well-defined group of sensations) and an affective process: such a feeling as hunger, or drowsiness: opposed to emotion and sentiment.
- In geometry, one of two directly opposite ways in which a construct may be generated, described, or thought.
- That which is felt or is held as a sentiment, view, or opinion; judgment; notion; opinion.
- Meaning; import; signification.
- Something sound or reasonable.
- Mind generally; consciousness; especially, understanding; cognitive power.
FEELS vs SENSE: ADJECTIVE
- N/A
- Of or relating to the portion of the strand of double-stranded DNA that serves as a template for and is transcribed into RNA.
FEELS vs SENSE: VERB
- Undergo passive experience of:We felt the effects of inflation undergopassiveexperienceofwefe
- Grope or feel in search of something
- Produce a certain impression
- Find by testing or cautious exploration
- Be felt or perceived in a certain way
- Have a feeling or perception about oneself in reaction to someone's behavior or attitude
- Seem with respect to a given sensation given
- Examine by touch
- Pass one's hands over the sexual organs of
- Come to believe on the basis of emotion, intuitions, or indefinite grounds
- Examine (a body part) by palpation
- Perceive by a physical sensation, e.g., coming from the skin or muscles
- Third-person singular simple present indicative form of feel.
- Undergo an emotional sensation
- Perceive by a physical sensation, e.g., coming from the skin or muscles
- Become aware of not through the senses but instinctively
- Comprehend
- Detect some circumstance or entity automatically
FEELS vs SENSE: TRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To perceive by the senses; to recognize.
- To detect automatically.
- To grasp; understand.
- To become aware of; perceive.
FEELS vs SENSE: OTHER WORD TYPES
- N/A
- The meaning of a word or expression
- Discern
- [= Dan. sandse, perceive, = Sw. sansa (refi.), recover oneself; from the noun.]
- To perceive by the senses.
- To give the sense of; expound.
- To perceive; comprehend; understand; realize; take into the mind.
- Same as incense.
FEELS vs SENSE: RELATED WORDS
- Knows, Seems, Looks, Thinks, Tactile property, Finger, Palpate, Tone, Flavor, Spirit, Experience, Smell, Find, Look, Sense
- Feeling, Sensory faculty, Good sense, Sentiency, Mother wit, Horse sense, Common sense, Sensation, Substance, Intension, Sentience, Gumption, Connotation, Meaning, Feel
FEELS vs SENSE: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Hears, Hurts, Does, Sounds, Tactile property, Finger, Palpate, Tone, Flavor, Spirit, Experience, Smell, Find, Look, Sense
- Idea, Kind, Instinct, Think, Rationality, Sort, Feeling, Mother wit, Good sense, Common sense, Sensation, Substance, Sentience, Meaning, Feel
FEELS vs SENSE: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Nah, that just feels too much like babysitting.
- Feels Like Accurately controls temperature in the home by determining the feels like temperature based on outdoor temperature, indoor temperature plus indoor relative humidity.
- In his heart he feels a warm glow and feels in his heart.
- It feels like we just met yesterday, but at the same time it feels like I have known you all my life.
- But the general idea is if the Person feels unsupported or feels they do not have enough support they get grumpy.
- No one feels pressured into consenting, or feels bad or guilty about saying no.
- At an historical moment that feels simultaneously riveting and overwhelming, a compass feels like a good thing to have.
- Pliant, submissive, loyal, humble; feels vulnerable and in constant jeopardy; feels hopeless, depressed, helpless, and powerless.
- He feels our daughter should apologise as he feels like the victim.
- Colorado feels betrayed being raised religious in the Lutheran faith and also feels like she has lost something.
- That, in a sense, will reduce the problem.
- Hope this makes sense n resolves any issues.
- In that sense, Jesus was actually a Buddhist.
- And having it invisible makes no sense either.
- There is no joy, no sense of accomplishment, no sense of worth.
- In such cases we will think, upon reflection, that what we seem to sense is something we only seem to sense.
- Let a Sense of Humor Break Presumptions Having a sense of humor does more than produce smiles and laughter.
- An enhanced sense of community solidarity was reported by many of those interviewed, as well as a greater sense of meaning in life.
- As reductionists, however, we must hold that these beliefs are justified only in a pragmatic sense, not in an epistemic sense.
- For GROHE Sense and Sense Guard warranty information, click the link below.
FEELS vs SENSE: QUESTIONS
- Where was Animal Collective's sixth album Feels recorded?
- What happens when a person with BPD feels abandoned?
- Can you feel what your unplanned pregnancy feels like?
- Does Shumpert know how Patrick Beverley feels about you?
- What causes pain that feels like an electrical shock?
- Does temperature affect how hard a V3 Boulder feels?
- Why your brain feels so foggy from sleep deprivation?
- Will Iran harshly confront Israel 'wherever feels necessary'?
- What makes Moonlight Feels Right better than Starbuck?
- When life feels too hard and the world feels hopeless?
- How precisely can we sense temperature differences?
- Is indirect translation word-for-word or sense for sense?
- How many sense data should be included in the sense data?
- What does Thomas Paine say about common sense in common sense?
- Does it make no sense to say royal blood type makes no sense?
- Why isn't the semi-circular sense included in the 5-sense model?
- What happens when the sense key is set to no sense?
- Can you tap into your sense of smell to sense energy?
- When does the plain sense of Scripture make common sense?
- What are the sense key and additional sense code fields?