sanse

listen to the pronunciation of sanse
Turkish - English
(Tıp) sense
The way that a referent is presented
To use biological senses: to either smell, watch, taste, hear or feel
One of the methods for a living being to gather data about the world; sight, smell, hearing, touch, taste
One of two opposite directions in which a vector (especially of motion) may point. See also polarity
A single conventional use of a word; one of the entries for a word in a dictionary
To instinctively be aware

She immediately sensed her disdain.

If you have a sense that something is true or get a sense that something is true, you think that it is true. Do you have the sense that you are loved by the public?
Sound practical judgment, as in common sense
If you sense something, you become aware of it or you realize it, although it is not very obvious. She probably sensed that I wasn't telling her the whole story He looks about him, sensing danger Prost had sensed what might happen
To perceive by the senses; to recognize
If you say that someone talks sense, you mean that what they say is sensible
detect some circumstance or entity automatically; "This robot can sense the presence of people in the room"; "particle detectors sense ionization"
method of perception, as in: Ears provide us with the sense of hearing
to see sense: see see. or sensory reception or sense perception Mechanism by which information is received about one's external or internal environment. Stimuli received by nerves, in some cases through specialized organs with receptor cells sensitive to one type of stimulus, are converted into impulses that travel to specialized areas of the brain, where they are analyzed. In addition to the "five senses" sight, hearing, smell, taste, and touch humans have senses of motion (kinesthetic sense), heat, cold, pressure, pain, and balance. Temperature, pressure, and pain are cutaneous (skin) senses; different points on the skin are particularly sensitive to each. See also chemoreception, ear, eye, inner ear, mechanoreception, nose, photoreception, proprioception, taste, thermoreception, tongue
{f} feel, perceive through the senses; apprehend, understand
Moral perception or appreciation
The property of representations of a part of the world that captures that part as being a certain way; meaning <Discussion> <References> Chris Eliasmith
If you have a sense of something such as duty or justice, you are aware of it and believe it is important. We must keep a sense of proportion about all this She needs to regain a sense of her own worth
feeling, emotion; ability to feel
If you say that there is no sense or little sense in doing something, you mean that it is not a sensible thing to do because nothing useful would be gained by doing it. There's no sense in pretending this doesn't happen = point