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English-Thai Dictionary

sense

N ความหมาย ของ คำ  ความหมาย  kwam-mai-kong-kam

 

sense

N ประสาทสัมผัส  การ รู้สึก  การ ได้กลิ่น  การ เห็น  การ รับ รส  การ ได้ยิน  pra-sad-sam-pad

 

sense

N สติ สัมปชัญญะ  เชาว์ ปัญญา  ความ ฉลาด  ความสามารถ ใน การพินิจพิเคราะห์  intellect understanding reason mind dullness idiocy misunderstanding sa-ti-sam-pa-chan-ya

 

sense

N อารมณ์  ความรู้สึก  ar-rom

 

sense

VT ตระหนัก  เข้าใจ  รับรู้  tra-nak

 

sense

VT สัมผัส  รู้สึก  sam-pad

 

sense organ

N อวัยวะ ประสาทสัมผัส  ตัวรับ ความรู้สึก  ar-wai-ya-wa-pra-sad-sam-pad

 

sense perception

N ความรู้สึก สัมผัส  ความรู้สึก จาก ประสาทสัมผัส  kwam-ru-suek-sam-pad

 

senseless

ADJ ซึ่ง ไม่มีความรู้ สึก  ไร้ความรู้สึก  ซึ่ง สิ้นสติ  ซึ่ง หมดความรู้สึก  sueng-mai-me-kwam-ru-suek

 

senseless

ADJ ซึ่ง ไม่ มีความหมาย  empty meaningless meaningful sueng-mai-me-kwam-mai

 

senseless

ADJ โง่  โง่เขลา  crazy silly sensible ngo

 

Webster's 1828 Dictionary

SENSE

n.[from L. sensus, from sentio, to feel or perceive. ] 1. The faculty of the soul by which it perceives external objects by means of impressions made on certain organs of the boky.
Sense is a branch of perception. the five senses of animals are sight, hearing, touch, smell, and taste.
2. Sensation; perception by the senses.
3. Perception by the intellect; apprehension; discernment.
4. Sensibility; quickness or acuteness of perception.
5. Understanding; soundness of faculties; strength of natural reason.
Opprest nature sleeps;
This rest might yet have balm'd thy broken senses. Shak.
6. Reason; reasonable or rational meaning.
He raves; his words are loose
As heaps of sand, and scattering wide from sense. Dryden.
7. Opinion; notion; judgement.
I speak my private but impartial sense
With freedom. Roscommon.
8. Consciousness; conviction; as a due sense of our weakness or sinfulness.
9. Moral perception.
Some are so hardened in wickedness, as to have no sense of the most friendly offices. L'Estrange.
1 . Meaning; important; signification; as the true sense of words or phrases. In interpretation, we are to examine whether words are to be understood in a literal or figurative sense. So we speak of a legal sense, a grammatical sense, an historical sense, etc.
Common sense, that power of the mind which, by a kind of instinct, or a short process of reasoning, perceives truth, the relation of things, cause and effect, etc. and hence enables the possessor to discern what is right, useful, expedient, or proper, and adopt the best meams to accomplish his purpose. This power seems to be the gift of nature, improved by experience and observation.
Moral sense, a determination of the mind to be pleased with the contemplation of those effections, actions or characters of rational agents, which are called good or virtuous.

 

SENSED

pp. Perceived by the senses. [Not in use. ]

 

SENSEFUL

a.sens'ful. Reasonable; judicious. [Not in use. ]

 

SENSELESS

a.sens'less. 1. Wanting the faculty of perception. The body when dead is senseless; but a limb or other part of the body may be senseless, when the rest of the boky enjoys its usual sensibility.
2. Unfelling; wanting sympathy.
The senseless feels not your pious sorrows. Rowe.
3. Unreasonable; foolish; stupid.
They would repent this their senseless perverseness, when it would be to late. Clarendon.
4. Unreasonable; stupid; acting without sense or judgement.
Ther were a senseless stupid race. Swift.
5. Contrary to reason or sound judgement; as, to destroy by a senseless fondness the happiness of children.
6. Wanting knowledge; unconscious; with of; as libertiness, senseless of any charm in love.
7. Wanting sensibility or quick perception.

 

SENSELESSLY

adv. sens'lessly. In a senseless manner; stupidly; unreasonably; as a man senselessly arrogant.

 

SENSELESSNESS

n.sens'lessness. Unreasonableness; folly; stupidity; absurdity.

 

Webster's 1913 Dictionary

SENSE

Sense, n. Etym: [L. sensus, from sentire, sensum, to perceive, to feel, from the same root as E. send; cf. OHG. sin sense, mind, sinnan to go, to journey, G. sinnen to meditate, to think: cf. F. sens. For the change of meaning cf. See, v. t. See Send, and cf. Assent, Consent, Scent, v. t., Sentence, Sentient. ]

 

1. (Physiol.)

 

Defn: A faculty, possessed by animals, of perceiving external objects by means of impressions made upon certain organs (sensory or sense organs ) of the body, or of perceiving changes in the condition of the body; as, the senses of sight, smell, hearing, taste, and touch. See Muscular sense, under Muscular, and Temperature sense, under Temperature. Let fancy still my sense in Lethe steep. Shak. What surmounts the reach Of human sense I shall delineate. Milton. The traitor Sense recalls The soaring soul from rest. Keble.

 

2. Perception by the sensory organs of the body; sensation; sensibility; feeling. In a living creature, though never so great, the sense and the affects of any one part of the body instantly make a transcursion through the whole. Bacon.

 

3. Perception through the intellect; apprehension; recognition; understanding; discernment; appreciation. This Basilius, having the quick sense of a lover. Sir P. Sidney. High disdain from sense of injured merit. Milton.

 

4. Sound perception and reasoning; correct judgment; good mental capacity; understanding; also, that which is sound, true, or reasonable; rational meaning. "He speaks sense. " Shak. He raves; his words are loose As heaps of sand, and scattering wide from sense. Dryden.

 

5. That which is felt or is held as a sentiment, view, or opinion; judgment; notion; opinion. I speak my private but impartial sense With freedom. Roscommon. The municipal council of the city had ceased to speak the sense of the citizens. Macaulay.

 

6. Meaning; import; signification; as, the true sense of words or phrases; the sense of a remark. So they read in the book in the law of God distinctly, and gave the sense. Neh. viii. 8.I think 't was in another sense. Shak.

 

7. Moral perception or appreciation. Some are so hardened in wickedness as to have no sense of the most friendly offices. L' Estrange.

 

8. (Geom.)

 

Defn: One of two opposite directions in which a line, surface, or volume, may be supposed to be described by the motion of a point, line, or surface. Common sense, according to Sir W. Hamilton: (a ) "The complement of those cognitions or convictions which we receive from nature, which all men possess in common, and by which they test the truth of knowledge and the morality of actions." (b ) "The faculty of first principles." These two are the philosophical significations. (c ) "Such ordinary complement of intelligence, that, if a person be deficient therein, he is accounted mad or foolish. " (d ) When the substantive is emphasized: "Native practical intelligence, natural prudence, mother wit, tact in behavior, acuteness in the observation of character, in contrast to habits of acquired learning or of speculation. " -- Moral sense. See under Moral, (a ). -- The inner, or internal, sense, capacity of the mind to be aware of its own states; consciousness; reflection. "This source of ideas every man has wholly in himself, and though it be not sense, as having nothing to do with external objects, yet it is very like it, and might properly enough be called internal sense. " Locke. -- Sense capsule (Anat. ), one of the cartilaginous or bony cavities which inclose, more or less completely, the organs of smell, sight, and hearing. -- Sense organ (Physiol.), a specially irritable mechanism by which some one natural force or form of energy is enabled to excite sensory nerves; as the eye, ear, an end bulb or tactile corpuscle, etc. -- Sense organule (Anat. ), one of the modified epithelial cells in or near which the fibers of the sensory nerves terminate.

 

Syn. -- Understanding; reason. -- Sense, Understanding, Reason. Some philosophers have given a technical signification to these terms, which may here be stated. Sense is the mind's acting in the direct cognition either of material objects or of its own mental states. In the first case it is called the outer, in the second the inner, sense. Understanding is the logical faculty, i. e., the power of apprehending under general conceptions, or the power of classifying, arranging, and making deductions. Reason is the power of apprehending those first or fundamental truths or principles which are the conditions of all real and scientific knowledge, and which control the mind in all its processes of investigation and deduction. These distinctions are given, not as established, but simply because they often occur in writers of the present day.

 

SENSE

Sense, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Sensed; p. pr. & vb. n. Sensing.]

 

Defn: To perceive by the senses; to recognize. [Obs. or Colloq. ] Is he sure that objects are not otherwise sensed by others than they are by him Glanvill.

 

SENSEFUL

SENSEFUL Sense "ful, a.

 

Defn: Full of sense, meaning, or reason; reasonable; judicious. [R.] "Senseful speech. " Spenser. "Men, otherwise senseful and ingenious. " Norris.

 

SENSELESS

SENSELESS Sense "less, a.

 

Defn: Destitute of, deficient in, or contrary to, sense; without sensibility or feeling; unconscious; stupid; foolish; unwise; unreasonable. You blocks, you stones, you worse than senseless things. Shak. The ears are senseless that should give us hearing. Shak. The senseless grave feels not your pious sorrows. Rowe. They were a senseless, stupid race. Swift. They would repent this their senseless perverseness when it would be too late. Clarendon. --- Sense "less *ly, adv. -- Sense "less *ness, n.

 

New American Oxford Dictionary

sense

sense |sens sɛns | noun 1 a faculty by which the body perceives an external stimulus; one of the faculties of sight, smell, hearing, taste, and touch: the bear has a keen sense of smell that enables it to hunt at dusk. 2 a feeling that something is the case: she had the sense of being a political outsider. an awareness or feeling that one is in a specified state: you can improve your general health and sense of well-being. (sense of ) a keen intuitive awareness of or sensitivity to the presence or importance of something: she had a fine sense of comic timing. 3 a sane and realistic attitude to situations and problems: he earned respect by the good sense he showed at meetings. a reasonable or comprehensible rationale: I can't see the sense in leaving all the work to you. 4 a way in which an expression or a situation can be interpreted; a meaning: it is not clear which sense of the word “characters ” is intended in this passage. 5 chiefly Mathematics & Physics a property, e.g., direction of motion, distinguishing a pair of objects, quantities, effects, etc. , that differ only in that each is the reverse of the other. [ as modifier ] Genetics relating to or denoting a coding sequence of nucleotides, complementary to an antisense sequence. verb [ with obj. ] perceive by a sense or senses: with the first frost, they could sense a change in the days. be aware of: she could sense her father's anger rising. [ with clause ] be aware that something is the case without being able to define exactly how one knows: he could sense that he wasn't liked. (of a machine or similar device ) detect: an optical fiber senses a current flowing in a conductor. PHRASES bring someone to their (or come to one's ) senses restore someone to (or regain ) consciousness. cause someone to (or start to ) think and behave reasonably after a period of folly or irrationality. in a (or one ) sense used to indicate a particular interpretation of a statement or situation: in a sense, behavior cannot develop independently of the environment. in one's senses fully aware and in control of one's thoughts and words; sane: would any man in his senses invent so absurd a story? make sense be intelligible, justifiable, or practicable. make sense of find meaning or coherence in: she must try to make sense of what was going on. out of one's senses in or into a state of insanity. take leave of one's senses (in hyperbolic use ) go insane. ORIGIN late Middle English (as a noun in the sense meaning ): from Latin sensus faculty of feeling, thought, meaning, from sentire feel. The verb dates from the mid 16th cent.

 

sense datum

sense da tum noun Philosophy an immediate object of perception, which is not a material object; a sense impression.

 

sense-experience

sense-ex pe ri ence noun experience that is derived from the senses.

 

sensei

sen sei |ˈsenˌsā, senˈsā ˌsɛnˈseɪ | noun ( pl. same ) (in martial arts ) a teacher: [ as title ] : Sensei Ritchie began work. ORIGIN Japanese, from sen previous + sei birth.

 

senseless

sense less |ˈsensləs ˈsɛnsləs | adjective 1 [ often as complement ] (of a person ) unconscious: the attack left a policeman beaten senseless. incapable of sensation: she knocked the glass from the girl's senseless fingers. 2 (esp. of violent or wasteful action ) without discernible meaning or purpose: in Vietnam, I saw the senseless waste of human beings. lacking common sense; wildly foolish: it was as senseless as crossing Death Valley on foot. DERIVATIVES sense less ly adverb, sense less ness noun

 

sense organ

sense or gan noun an organ of the body that responds to external stimuli by conveying impulses to the sensory nervous system.

 

Sensex

Sensex |ˈsɛnsɛks | noun a figure indicating the relative prices of shares on the Mumbai (Bombay ) Stock Exchange. ORIGIN 1990s: blend of sensitive and index .

 

Oxford Dictionary

sense

sense |sɛns | noun 1 a faculty by which the body perceives an external stimulus; one of the faculties of sight, smell, hearing, taste, and touch: the bear has a keen sense of smell which enables it to hunt at dusk. 2 a feeling that something is the case: she had the sense of being a political outsider | you can improve your general health and sense of well-being. a keen intuitive awareness of or sensitivity to the presence or importance of something: she had a fine sense of comic timing. 3 [ mass noun ] a sane and realistic attitude to situations and problems: he earned respect by the good sense he showed at meetings. a reasonable or comprehensible rationale: I can't see the sense in leaving all the work to you. 4 a way in which an expression or a situation can be interpreted; a meaning: it is not clear which sense of the word ‘characters ’ is intended in this passage. 5 chiefly Mathematics & Physics a property (e.g. direction of motion ) distinguishing a pair of objects, quantities, effects, etc. which differ only in that each is the reverse of the other. [ as modifier ] Genetics relating to or denoting a coding sequence of nucleotides, complementary to an antisense sequence. verb [ with obj. ] 1 perceive by a sense or senses: with the first frost, they could sense a change in the days. be aware of (something ) without being able to define exactly how one knows: she could sense her father's anger rising | [ with clause ] : he could sense that he wasn't liked. 2 (of a machine or similar device ) detect: an optical fibre senses a current flowing in a conductor. PHRASES bring someone to their (or come to one's ) senses restore someone to (or regain ) consciousness. cause someone to (or start to ) think and behave reasonably after a period of folly or irrationality. in a (or one ) sense by a particular interpretation of a statement or situation: in a sense, behaviour cannot develop independently of the environment. in one's senses fully aware and in control of one's thoughts and words; sane: would any man in his senses invent so absurd a story? make sense be intelligible, justifiable, or practicable. make sense of find meaning or coherence in: she must try to make sense of what was going on. out of one's senses in or into a state of madness. take leave of one's senses (in hyperbolic use ) go mad. ORIGIN late Middle English (as a noun in the sense meaning ): from Latin sensus faculty of feeling, thought, meaning , from sentire feel . The verb dates from the mid 16th cent.

 

sense datum

sense datum noun Philosophy an immediate object of perception, which is not a material object; a sense impression.

 

sense-experience

sense-ex pe ri ence noun experience that is derived from the senses.

 

sensei

sensei |sɛnˈseɪ | noun ( pl. same ) (in martial arts ) a teacher: [ as title ] : Sensei Ritchie began work. ORIGIN Japanese, from sen previous + sei birth .

 

senseless

sense |less |ˈsɛnslɪs | adjective 1 [ often as complement ] (of a person ) unconscious: the attack left a policeman beaten senseless. incapable of sensation: she knocked the glass from the girl's senseless fingers. 2 lacking common sense; wildly foolish: it was as senseless as crossing Death Valley on foot. (especially of violent or wasteful action ) without discernible meaning or purpose: in Vietnam I saw the senseless waste of human beings. DERIVATIVES senselessly adverb, senselessness noun

 

sense organ

sense organ noun an organ of the body which responds to external stimuli by conveying impulses to the sensory nervous system.

 

Sensex

Sensex |ˈsɛnsɛks | noun a figure indicating the relative prices of shares on the Mumbai (Bombay ) Stock Exchange. ORIGIN 1990s: blend of sensitive and index .

 

American Oxford Thesaurus

sense

sense noun 1 the sense of touch: sensory faculty, feeling, sensation, perception; sight, hearing, touch, taste, smell. 2 a sense of guilt: feeling, awareness, sensation, consciousness, recognition. 3 a sense of humor: appreciation, awareness, understanding, comprehension, discernment; informal nose. 4 she had the sense to press the panic button: wisdom, common sense, sagacity, discernment, perception; wit, intelligence, cleverness, shrewdness, judgment, reason, logic, brain (s ); informal gumption, horse sense, savvy, (street ) smarts. ANTONYMS stupidity. 5 I can't see the sense in this: purpose, point, reason, object, motive; use, value, advantage, benefit. 6 the different senses of well : meaning, definition, import, signification, significance, purport, implication, nuance; drift, gist, thrust, tenor, message. verb she sensed their hostility: discern, feel, observe, notice, recognize, pick up (on ), be aware of, distinguish, make out, identify; comprehend, apprehend, see, appreciate, realize; suspect, have a funny feeling about, have a hunch about, divine, intuit; informal catch on to.

 

senseless

senseless adjective 1 they found him senseless on the floor: unconscious, stunned, insensible, insensate, comatose, knocked out, out cold, out for the count; numb; informal KO'd, dead to the world, passed out. ANTONYMS conscious. 2 a senseless waste: pointless, futile, useless, needless, unavailing, in vain, purposeless, meaningless, unprofitable; absurd, foolish, insane, stupid, idiotic, ridiculous, ludicrous, mindless, illogical. ANTONYMS wise.

 

Oxford Thesaurus

sense

sense noun 1 the sense of touch: sensory faculty, feeling, sensation, perception; sight, hearing, touch, taste, smell, sixth sense; Zoology, dated sensibility. 2 she felt a sense of guilt: awareness, feeling, sensation, consciousness, perception, recognition. 3 a sense of humour: appreciation, awareness, understanding, comprehension, discernment, acknowledgement. 4 the driver had the sense to press the panic button: wisdom, common sense, good sense, practicality, sagacity, sharpness, discernment, perception; native wit, mother wit, wit, level-headedness, intelligence, cleverness, astuteness, shrewdness, judgement, soundness of judgement, understanding, reason, logic, brain, brains; informal gumption, nous, horse sense, savvy; Brit. informal loaf, common; N. Amer. informal smarts. ANTONYMS stupidity, mindlessness. 5 I can't see the sense in leaving all the work to you: purpose, point, reason, aim, object, motive, use, utility, value, advantage, benefit. 6 here there are two different senses of exist : meaning, definition, import, denotation, signification, significance, purport, implication, intention, nuance, drift, gist, thrust, tenor, burden, theme, message, essence, spirit, substance. verb she could sense their hostility to her | he sensed that disaster was imminent: discern, feel, observe, notice, get the impression of, recognize, pick up, be /become cognizant of, be /become aware of, be /become conscious of, get /come to know, tell, distinguish, make out, find, identify, comprehend, apprehend, see, discover, learn, appreciate, realize, suspect, have a funny feeling, have a hunch, just know, divine, intuit, conceive; informal catch on to; Brit. informal twig; rare cognize.

 

senseless

senseless adjective 1 he was punched and kicked senseless by a gang of thugs: unconscious, out cold, out, cold, stunned, numb, numbed, insensible, insensate, comatose, knocked out, out for the count; informal KO'd, kayoed, laid out, dead to the world, out like a light; Brit. informal spark out; rare soporose, soporous. ANTONYMS conscious, aware. 2 a senseless waste of life: pointless, futile, hopeless, fruitless, useless, needless, wasted, in vain, unavailing, aimless, idle, to no purpose, purposeless, worthless, meaningless, valueless, unproductive, unprofitable; absurd, foolish, mad, insane, asinine, moronic, imbecilic, nonsensical, stupid, idiotic, silly, irrelevant, footling, fatuous, hollow, inane, ridiculous, ludicrous, mindless, unintelligent, unwise, irrational, illogical; informal daft. ANTONYMS sensible, wise.

 

Duden Dictionary

Sense

Sen se Substantiv, feminin , die |S e nse |die Sense; Genitiv: der Sense, Plural: die Sensen mittelhochdeutsch sēnse (mitteldeutsch ), segens (e ), althochdeutsch segensa, eigentlich = die Schneidende Gerät mit langem, am freien Ende spitz zulaufendem bogenförmigem Blatt zum Mähen von Gras oder Getreide Sense sein salopp Schluss sein Herkunft ungeklärt bei mir ist jetzt Sense (ich habe endlich genug davon, mache Schluss )

 

sensen

sen sen schwaches Verb selten |s e nsen |schwaches Verb; Perfektbildung mit »hat « mit der Sense mähen

 

Sensenblatt

Sen sen blatt Substantiv, Neutrum , das |S e nsenblatt | Blatt 5 einer Sense

 

sensenförmig

sen sen för mig Adjektiv |s e nsenförmig |in der Art eines Sensenblattes bogenförmig gekrümmt

 

Sensenmann

Sen sen mann Substantiv, maskulin , der |S e nsenmann |(den Tod 1 verkörperndes ) menschliches Gerippe mit einer Sense der Tod als Sensenmann

 

Sensenstein

Sen sen stein Substantiv, maskulin , der |S e nsenstein |Wetzstein zum Schärfen der Sense

 

Sensenwurf

Sen sen wurf Substantiv, maskulin , der |S e nsenwurf |Sensenstiel

 

French Dictionary

sensé

sensé , ée adj. adjectif Qui est plein de bon sens, raisonnable. : Une décision sensée. SYNONYME judicieux ; sage . Note Orthographique sen s é.

 

sensément

sensément adv. adverbe D ’une manière judicieuse, avec intérêt. Note Orthographique sen s ément.

 

senseur

senseur FORME FAUTIVE Anglicisme au sens de capteur.

 

Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary

sense

sense /sens /〖原義は 「 (五感の1つの )感覚 」〗(形 )senseless, sensible, sensitive, (名 )sensibility 名詞 s /-ɪz /1 U «…する » 分別 (のあること ), 思慮 , 良識 «to do » ; 判断力 (sensible )common sense 常識 He had the sense [good sense ] to refuse the offer .彼にはその申し出を断るだけの分別 [良識 ]があった ▸ I thought you had more sense than to do such a silly thing .そんな愚かな事をしないだけの思慮分別が君にあると思っていたのに (know better )▸ a woman of sense 思慮分別のある女性 (!コーパス a sensible womanの方が普通 ) 2 C 〖通例単数形で 〗 «…という » (漠然とした )感覚 , 感じ (sensation ); 意識 , 心持ち , 気持ち (feeling ) «that 節 » (コーパスの窓 )▸ I had [got ] the sense that she kept something from me .彼女は何か隠し事をしているような気がした (!コーパス theはaのこともある ) have a strong sense of self 自意識が強い There was a sense of relief from doing that .そうすることで安心感があった give people a sense of community 〈事が 〉人々に共同意識を与える lull users into a false sense of security ユーザーをだまして安心させる have [feel ] a sense of purpose 目的意識を持つ [感じる ]3 U 〖時にa (生まれながらの )感じる [知る , わかる , 判別する ], , 感覚 , センス (コーパスの窓 ; taste 名詞 2 )have a sense of humor ユーモアのセンスがある ▸ I don't think much of your dress [clothes ] sense .君の服装のセンスはたいしたことないね the moral [religious ] sense 道徳 [宗教 ]心 keep a [lose all ] sense of proportion 分別を保つ [まったく失う ]lose one's sense of balance 平衡感覚を失う コーパスの窓 a /one's /the sense of ▸ a of loss [urgency ]喪失 [緊迫 ]感 ▸ a of pride 誇らしい気持ち ▸ a of wonder «…についての » 好奇心 «about » ▸ a of freedom [satisfaction, achievement ]開放 [満足, 達成 ]感 ▸ a of guilt [justice ]罪悪 [正義 ]感 ▸ a of belonging «…への » 帰属意識 «to » ▸ a of shame 恥ずかしい気持ち ▸ a of having done well うまくやったという気持ち ▸ a deep of gratitude 深い感謝の気持ち ▸ a of helplessness 無力感 ▸ a of warmth [pain ]暖かい [痛い ]感じ ▸ a of responsibility 責任感 ▸ a of place 土地勘 ▸ a of style 趣味の良さ ▸ a of time 時間の感覚 ▸ a of perspective 遠近感 ; 大局観 ▸ a of identity 自己認識 ▸ a of history 歴史意識 ▸ a of irony 皮肉を解する力 ▸ a of fun 遊び心 ▸ a of duty 義務感 ▸ a of reality 現実感 ▸ a of occasion 状況を正確に見抜く力 ▸ a of direction 複合語 4 C 感覚 (機能 ), 五感 (の1つ ), 肉体感覚 ; 官能 (sensitive )the sense of smell [touch, taste, hearing, sight ]きゆう [触, 味, 聴, 視 ]覚 have a sixth sense 第六感が働く 〘五感を越えた直感 〙the five senses 五感 have a keen [poor ] sense of smell 嗅覚が鋭い [鈍い ]類義 senseとsensation, sensibility sense は外界の刺激 影響に対する感覚的および精神的な能力. sensation は外界の刺激に対する感覚的ことに視覚的 神経的な反応. sensibility は感覚的または情緒的に感応する力 .5 〖通例one 's s 〗意識 ; 正気 , 本性 , 本心 lose [recover, ⦅やや古 ⦆regain ] one's senses 意識を失う [回復する ]be out of one's senses ⦅やや古 ⦆気が変になっている come to one's senses 〈人が 〉自分が誤っていることに気づく, 悔い改める bring A (back ) to one's senses 〈事が 〉A 〈人 〉に誤りを気づかせる, 悔い改めさせる 6 a. C 〖通例単数形で 〗(語 句の )意味 , 語義 (meaning 1 )He's very lucky in the sense that he's got such kind parents .彼はあのような優しい両親を持っているという意味では非常に幸運だ In what sense do you use the word? 君はその語をどういう意味で用いているのか I'm a grown-up in every sense of the word .私はあらゆる意味で大人だ In a (very ) real sense , he is now one of the best tennis players .本当に彼は現役最高のテニス選手の1人だ in a broad [narrow ] sense 広い [狭い ]意味では b. U 価値 , 意義 , 意味 (point ); (もっともだと思われる )理由 , 道理 (reason )What is the sense of talking like that? そんなふうに話して何になるのか in a [ne ] s nse ある意味で (in a way )That is true, in a sense .ある意味ではそれは本当です in n s nse 断じて でない He is in no sense a gentleman .彼が紳士であるわけがない it st nds to s nse 道理にかなう .m ke (…) s nse (!コーパス senseの前に no , any , more, perfect, good, some, (not …) much, littleなどの修飾語を伴うことがある ) 1 説明 事などが 〉【人に 】意味が明瞭 (めいりよう )である, 理解しやすい «to » ; 〈人が 〉【事を 】理解する «of » His sentences make no sense to me .彼の文は僕には理解しがたい Can you make sense of what he says? 彼の言う事がわかりますか 2 説明 理由などの 〉筋が通る , つじつまが合う (be reasonable )His excuse for being late made no sense at all .彼の遅刻の弁解は筋が通らなかった 3 賢明である It makes sense to stop smoking .タバコはやめた方がいいよ s e s nse 自分の愚かさ [むちゃ ]に気づく Make her see sense before it's too late .手遅れになる前に彼女にむちゃを気づかせろ t lk s nse ⦅主に話 ⦆もっともな [まともな ]ことを言う ; 〖命令形で; T-!〗ばかなことを言うな .t lk [kn ck, dr ve ] some s nse into A A 〈人 〉にばかな真似をやめさせる, 根性を叩き込む (!時に荒っぽい方法を暗示する ) ▸ I will talk some sense into her .彼女にばかな真似をしないように言って聞かせるよ th re is a s nse in which ある意味では …である (in a sense )There is a sense in which he is a national hero .ある意味で彼は国民的英雄だ th re is n s nse in do ing ⦅話 ⦆…してもむだだ There is no sense in waiting here .ここで待っていてもむだだ 動詞 他動詞 1 (漠然と )〈事 〉に感づく , 気づく ; (that )節 /wh節 〗…ということを […かを ]感づく ; A do /doing Aが … する […している ]のを感づく sense danger 危険に感づく He began to sense that he was disliked by his boss .彼は上司に嫌われていることに気づき始めた Mary sensed what was happening around her .メリーは周りで何が起こっているのか気づいていた 2 〈機械などが 〉〈事 〉を感知 [探知 ]する ; wh節 〗…かを感知する .~̀ of dir ction 1 方向感覚 lose one's sense of direction 方向感覚を失う have a very bad [pretty poor ] sense of direction 方向音痴である .2 (人生の )目的意識 .~́ rgans the 感覚器官 〘目 鼻など 〙.

 

senseless

sense less /sénsləs /sense 形容詞 1 more ; most ⦅非難して ⦆出来事 行為が 〉無意味な , 思慮を欠いた , むだな the senseless killing of innocent children 罪なき子供たちの愚かな殺戮 さつりく 2 比較なし 意識を失った , 意識不明の My father drank himself senseless .父は気を失うまで酒を飲んだ ly 副詞 ness 名詞