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If you are talking about senses, like your 5 senses, then it is called 'sens'.
No, they do not. The sense of taste is an example of a chemical sense.
Smell.
That depends on how you want to use it. Sense as in logic: "This doesn't make many sense," Sense as in see, hear, feel, etc.: "A dog's sense of smell is better than a human's."
sight Consider this : If you had a choice of which four senses you would lose, or which sense would you not wish to lose most of all, the answer becomes clear.
they dont have the sense of touch but they can sense chemicals, to smell or taste.
Yep. Senses is smelling, and when you breathe, that's a senses.
"Senses" ? sight and hearing are senses - you question makes no sense.
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.
You could rewrite the senses of a human with possessive nouns by phrasing them as "the human's sense of sight," "the human's sense of hearing," "the human's sense of taste," "the human's sense of touch," and "the human's sense of smell."
there sense of smell
there sense of smell
The sense of sight is one of the five senses. The other four senses are hearing, smell, taste, and touch.
What do you mean by the senses of the scripture? Are you referring to the sense of it, or are you referring to something else?
If you are talking about senses, like your 5 senses, then it is called 'sens'.
Whales have many keen senses that allow for their survival. Two senses that whales have developed through history include their sense of touch and their sense of sound.
The External Senses are seeing, hearing, smelling, tasting and touching. The Internal Senses are common sense, memory (storage of information and retrieval of information), imagination and evaluation.