Friday, March 29, 2024

...is this man on his senses?

...is the man that menace a judge daughter in his senses? Can he be arrested? What do you think, it is true that he can kill a man on fith avenue and not be arrested? Why are people afraid of the beast? senses: ...faculties such as sight, hearing, taste, smell, or touch; sensations; feelings Not to be confused with: census – an official enumeration of the population. ...Abused, Confused, & Misused Words by Mary Embree Copyright © 2007, 2013 by Mary Embree sense (sĕns) ...n. 1. a. 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. ...b. A perception or feeling produced by a stimulus; sensation: a sense of fatigue and hunger. ...2. senses The faculties of sensation as means of providing physical gratification and pleasure. ...3. a. An intuitive or acquired perception or ability to estimate: a sense of diplomatic timing. b. A capacity to appreciate or understand: a keen sense of humor. c. A vague feeling or presentiment: a sense of impending doom. d. Recognition or perception either through the senses or through the intellect; consciousness: has no sense of shame. ...4. a. Natural understanding or intelligence, especially in practical matters: The boy had sense and knew just what to do when he got lost. b. often senses The normal ability to think or reason soundly: Have you taken leave of your senses? c. Something sound or reasonable: There's no sense in waiting three hours. ....5. a. A meaning that is conveyed, as in speech or writing; signification: The sense of the criticism is that the proposal has certain risks. b. One of the meanings of a word or phrase: The word set has many senses. ...6. a. Judgment; consensus: sounding out the sense of the electorate on capital punishment. b. Intellectual interpretation, as of the significance of an event or the conclusions reached by a group: I came away from the meeting with the sense that we had resolved all outstanding issues. tr.v. sensed, sens·ing, sens·es ...1. To become aware of; perceive: organisms able to sense their surroundings. ...2. To grasp; understand: sensed that the financial situation would improve. ...3. To detect automatically: sense radioactivity.

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