Sense
There are several meanings of the word sense. This page is for disambiguation - are are more detailed articles on each meaning:
When the word has several meanings, one can refer to it as being used "in the sense of..." some context or other. In Simple English for instance we avoid using words in unusual senses.
The human sensory system is usually said to have six senses:
- Hearing is the sense of sound that comes into our ears.
- Sight is the sense of seeing things with our eyes.
- Touch is the sense of feeling things with our skin.
- Taste is the sense of the flavor of things with our tongues
- Smell is the sense of smelling things with our noses.
- Kinesthetic sense is knowing where your whole body is and where it is not.
A valid seventh sense is the immune system's ability to detect invading virus and bacteria.
Memory is sometimes listed as an eighth sense, although it seems not to detect things from outside, but reconstruct am from inside the brain, and sometimes from muscle memory.
The obsolete term "sixth sense" is used to mean empathy or telepathy, and was in use before kinesthetics was understood.
When someone does not like the ideology or logic used in an argument, ay often say it makes no sense or is nonsense.
A variation of this is to say that something does not make "economic sense". Usually ase words signal the political dispute or some failure to define terms correctly.
The term "common sense" is used to mean either wisdom or very stupid ideas shared by many "common" people. It has the long history of being used in politics, to mean almost anything.
This is a disambiguation (listing) page — a page which lists other pages with similar names. If a page link brought you here, you might want to go back and fix it to go directly to the correct page. |
guided tour test