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  1. Dictionary
    sense
    /sɛns/

    noun

    verb

    • 1. perceive by a sense or senses: "with the first frost, they could sense a change in the days"
    • 2. (of a machine or similar device) detect: "an optical fibre senses a current flowing in a conductor"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. an ability to understand, recognize, value, or react to something, especially any of the five physical abilities to see, hear, smell, taste, and feel: With her excellent sense of smell, she could tell if you were a smoker from the other side of the room. My cold is so bad I've lost my sense of smell / taste (= I can't smell / taste anything).

  3. The meaning of SENSE is a meaning conveyed or intended : import, signification; especially : one of a set of meanings a word or phrase may bear especially as segregated in a dictionary entry. How to use sense in a sentence.

  4. A sense is an awareness or recognition of something; the stimulus may be subjective and the entire process may be mental or intellectual: a sense of failure. A sensation is an impression derived from an objective (external) stimulus through any of the sense organs: a sensation of heat.

  5. Sense has many shades of meaning, all involving understanding or becoming aware of something. You can use sense to describe something perceived with your senses, like when you sense your dog is near because of the smell.

  6. Definition of sense noun in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

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