• Noun

    any of the faculties, as sight, hearing, smell, taste, or touch, by which humans and animals perceive stimuli originating from outside or inside the body.
    these faculties collectively.
    their operation or function; sensation.
    a feeling or perception produced through the organs of touch, taste, etc., or resulting from a particular condition of some part of the body
    to have a sense of cold.
    a faculty or function of the mind analogous to sensation
    the moral sense.
    any special capacity for perception, estimation, appreciation, etc.
    a sense of humor.
    Usually, senses. clear and sound mental faculties; sanity
    Have you taken leave of your senses?
    a more or less vague perception or impression
    a sense of security.
    a mental discernment, realization, or recognition; acuteness
    a just sense of the worth of a thing.
    the recognition of something as incumbent or fitting
    a sense of duty.
    sound practical intelligence
    He has no sense.
    something that is sensible or reasonable
    to talk sense.
    the meaning or gist of something
    You missed the sense of his statement.
    the value or worth of something; merit
    There's no sense in worrying about the past.
    the meaning of a word or phrase in a specific context, esp. as isolated in a dictionary or glossary; the semantic element in a word or group of words.
    an opinion or judgment formed or held, esp. by an assemblage or body of persons
    the sense of a meeting.
    Genetics . a DNA sequence that is capable of coding for an amino acid ( distinguished from nonsense ).
    Mathematics . one of two opposite directions in which a vector may point.

    Verb (used with object)

    to perceive (something) by the senses; become aware of.
    to grasp the meaning of; understand.
    (of certain mechanical devices) to detect physical phenomena, as light, temperature, radioactivity, etc., mechanically, electrically, or photoelectrically.
    Computers . to read (punched holes, tape, data, etc.) mechanically, electrically, or photoelectrically. ?

    Idioms

    come to one's senses
    to regain one's good judgment or realistic point of view; become reasonable.
    in a sense
    according to one explanation or view; to a certain extent
    In a sense it may have been the only possible solution.
    make sense
    to be reasonable or comprehensible
    His attitude doesn't make sense.

    tác giả


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