Senses.
1. Seeing 2. Hearing 3. Smelling 4. Feeling 5. Tasting Hopefully this helps :)
Well, really, all the senses are equally important. You have to hear to understand a sound, you have to taste to understand the flavor, you need to touch to feel something, you need to see to understand what something looks like, you need to smeel to understand an odor... but if you are born without one of these senses, it does not mean you can't live a completely normal life.
Tae
Same reason the sense of sight isn't called the sense of light, or the sense of taste isn't called the sense of chemical.
There are five internal senses: 1. The intuition (common sense) combines the forms it receives from the five external senses. 2. The imagination keeps these forms stored. 3. The sense of memory (imaginative power) combines and separates forms kept in the imagination. 4. The estimative power judges perceived salient or of interest (e.g., the sheep that apprehends the perceived wolf as something it should flee from). 5. The memory keeps these prerational estimations.
senses
senses
The five senses are: Sight Touch Hearing Smell Taste None develop sound but hearing processes it.
Elephants have very good hearing and sense of smell, but poor eye-sight. Their normal hearing range depends on the volume of sound.
Black bears have the same five senses humans have. These are sight, hearing, smell, taste, and touch. Bears have an incredible sense of smell, greater than that of a bloodhound. They also have good vision and hearing.
Senses are by which we experience our surroundings. Sight, hearing, taste, feel, smell. A bark is a sound.
1. Seeing 2. Hearing 3. Smelling 4. Feeling 5. Tasting Hopefully this helps :)
Hearing
They are all verbs, but since you have logged your question under 'Nouns and Pronouns' I think that what you meant to write was 'Taste, smell, hearing, touch, and sight are considered to be what?' In which case, the answer would be 'senses'.
Sensory receptors are defined as dendrites of sensory neurons specialized for receiving specific kinds of stimuli without which we would not live long. The four general sense receptors are pain receptors, temperature receptors, touch receptors, and taste and smell receptors.
Sensory language is when the author uses words and details that appeal to a reader's senses (sight, touch, taste, hearing, smell, emotion). Also transmitting impulses from sense organs to nerve centers; afferent.
Sound, sight and smell.