Yes, I would say that the word 'dark' is a sensory word because most use of the word refers to something visual (the sense of sight); although there is an abstract use for the word dark also. Example Sentences:
I prefer the dark blue suit to the lighter one.
Please turn on the driveway light, it's very dark outside already.
This story has a lot of dark humor.
Yes, the word dark is both an adjective and a noun; for example:adjective: I prefer the dark shade to the lighter shades.noun: He stumbled in the dark.
Fa only means the fourth tone in a major scale according to the sol-fa system of music notation. It does not evoke any kind of sensory experience at all.
"Darker" is an adjective in its comparative form.
aleelg
Yes, the term 'glow-in-the-dark' is an adjective, a compound word that describes a noun (glow in the dark paint; a glow-in-the-dark arrow).The term 'glow in the dark' is also a predicate(the part of a sentence that includes the verb and all of the words following the verb that relate to that verb). Example: I love to see the fireflies glow in the dark.
sensory
Yes, the word "see" is a sensory word, referring to the use of the sense of sight.
no no
It is an action verb (but it does evoke sensation, nevertheless). However, it is not a sensory word, per se.
We are Fond providing Sensory Channels
yes
"Clanging"
yes<3
Sensory
Yes, the word "wind" can be considered a sensory word because it evokes a sensation related to touch and sound, such as feeling the breeze on one's skin or hearing the howling of the wind.
The function of the sensory system, from the word itself is Sensory in nature. This means that sensory organs are the ones that functions as the way the person smell, see, touch, hear and taste.Novanet: Thinking
Afferent nerve