Yes. In general, people can see, hear, taste, feel and smell. There are conditions and diseases that may affect all of these in some respect, though.
Dogs have all five senses, and their hearing and often their sight are better than that of humans, depending on the breed of the dog. They do not substitute hearing for any other sense, they just have very good hearing usually.
Of the five senses, smell ranks fourth in importance for humans, although it is much more pronounced in other animals.
Humans always have a sense of smell. Puberty has nothing to do with it.
The thirteen senses in the book "Thirteen Senses: A Memoir" by Victor Villasenor are the traditional five senses (sight, hearing, touch, taste, smell) along with an additional eight senses that Villasenor believes all humans possess, such as the sense of balance, sense of direction, and sense of presence.
they all do the same job.
In the sense that all humans as a species are related to orangutans, then you would say yes. In the sense of you trying to infer an insult, then no.
they all do the same job.
not all mammals have five fingers and pose able thumbs and our hands are not harry
All animals have slightly different senses. Some, such as bats, use echolocation, which is a sense that other animals, such as humans, are incapable of attaining. Sharks can sense blood, movement and energy through water much further away than humans can.
LOLWUT? That sentence makes no sense at all we don't scratch all the time because were normal mammals...
The sense of smell is the same for both humans and sheep. Sheep use their sense of smell to find food and to sense other sheep around them.
family members, love, food