duyu, duyum, duygu, his; duyarlık

listen to the pronunciation of duyu, duyum, duygu, his; duyarlık
Turkish - English
{i} sensation
A physical feeling or perception from something that comes into contact with the body; something sensed
A widespread reaction of interest or excitement
a condition of mind resulting from spiritual or inherent feeling
the faculty through which the external world is apprehended; "in the dark he had to depend on touch and on his senses of smell and hearing"
an unelaborated elementary awareness of stimulation; "a sensation of touch" a general feeling of excitement and heightened interest; "anticipation produced in me a sensation somewhere between hope and fear" a state of widespread public excitement and interest; "the news caused a sensation
Sensation is your ability to feel things physically, especially through your sense of touch. The pain was so bad that she lost all sensation. = feeling
Or Feeling The Sanskrit word is Vedana One of the Five Skandhas See Five Skandhas
If a person, event, or situation is a sensation, it causes great excitement or interest. the film that turned her into an overnight sensation
A purely spiritual or psychical affection; agreeable or disagreeable feelings occasioned by objects that are not corporeal or material
{i} perception, function of the senses; physical feeling; emotion, mental feeling; excitement
n A perception associated with stimulation of a sense organ or with a specific bodily condition
The investigation of the ways in which people react to the raw sensory information they receive through their sense organs
A sensation is a physical feeling. Floating can be a very pleasant sensation A sensation of burning or tingling may be experienced in the hands. = feeling
a general feeling of excitement and heightened interest; "anticipation produced in me a sensation somewhere between hope and fear"
If a person, event, or situation causes a sensation, they cause great interest or excitement. She was just 14 when she caused a sensation at the Montreal Olympics. Mental process (such as seeing, hearing, or smelling) due to immediate bodily stimulation, usually as distinguished from perception. When a stimulus impinges on a sense organ and the organism responds, it is said that the stimulus has been sensed. See also psychophysics, sense-data
A state of excited interest or feeling, or that which causes it
The process of receiving, translating, and transmitting messages from the outside world to the brain (p 106)
Detection of stimulation, the study of which commonly deals with the structure of sensory mechanisms and the stimuli that affect those mechanisms (Solso)
duyu, duyum, duygu, his; duyarlık
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