No, the word "sense" is a verb or a noun.Examples:My dog can sense when I'm upset. (verb)Hortense has a sense of style. (noun)The adjective form of the verb to "sense" are the present participle sensing and the past participle sensed.The closest related adjective forms of the noun "sense" are sensible, sensory, and sensitive.
visual sensing
We can look for it by using these tecniqes. •Seeing it in rocks (meteorites) •Seeing it gravitationally •Seeing it spectroscopically (remote sensing) •Seeing morphological features of it (remote sensing) •Seeing it (remote sensing)
THE RATIO OF DigitalNumber VALUES OF CORRESPONDING PIXELS IN HYPERSPECTRAL REMOTE SENSING IS CALLED BAND RATIO
Digital Terrain Modeling
The four learning styles identified by Silver are activist, reflector, theorist, and pragmatist. Activists learn by doing and experiencing, reflectors learn by observing and reflecting, theorists learn through understanding concepts and theories, and pragmatists learn by applying knowledge to practical situations.
ISFP personality type: Introverted, Sensing, Feeling, Perceiving ISTJ personality type: Introverted, Sensing, Thinking, Judging
Think about it. A verb is a doing word - so yes "Think" is a verb.
It might be, as in "thinking man" or "thinking machine." It is normally a verb form, the present participle of the verb "to think."
No it's an action verb.
The verb of sensation is sense. As in "to sense".Other verbs are senses, sensing and sensed.Some example sentences are:"I sense a great disturbance in The Force"."He senses a great disturbance"."Did you say he is sensing a great disturbance?""He might have sensed my tummy rumbling".
when we take in data w/o preconceptions we are sensing; when we focus on particular sensations and catergorize them according to our memory system, we are perceiving; and when we draw conclusions about their patterns and meaning, we are thinking. (thinking for yourself 29) you sense a ball coming straight for your face, the sensing goes from the eyes to the brain, your brain percieves this message and turns it into a thought. therefor you are observing this and your brain is organizing. ge 104/114- critical thinking and problem solving, exercize 1
Yes, the word 'think' is both a verb and a noun.The verb think (thinks, thinking, thought) is to form or have in the mind; to have as an opinion; to use the power of reason.The word think has a limited use as a noun as a word for an act of thinking, for example: We've had a good think and have made a decision.
No. You are thinking of "accompany"
ponder
Guff
bookkeeper