First as to grammar, it is either sensed or it is not.
There are many things which affect us to which we are insensible.
UV, IR, x-rays, radio waves, - we can directly sense none of these.
There are social situations, to which we do react, and for which we have no particular sense organs. Love and hate, and disrespect are all things for which we have no sense organs. These are socially acquired sensitivities.
The nervous system is primarily involved in the sense of touch. Nerve receptors called mechanoreceptors in the skin send signals to the brain when pressure or vibrations are detected, allowing us to perceive and interpret the sensation of touch.
Yes, dogs can sense heat and use it to navigate their surroundings. They have a special sensory organ called the Jacobson's organ, which helps them detect heat and other environmental cues. This ability allows them to locate sources of warmth and navigate their surroundings effectively.
The human body has five sense organs: sight, hearing, touch, taste and smell. The largest sense organ is touch, which involves the skin.
Yes, sensation involves the stimulation of sense organs such as the eyes, ears, skin, taste buds, and nose. These sense organs receive information from the external environment and transmit it to the brain for processing.
The main sensory organ responsible for the sense of smell is the olfactory system, which includes the olfactory epithelium in the nasal cavity.
your heart beating is an organ that an be sensed
The BRAIN!
sensor, sensed, sensing, sensitive, sensation, sensational, sensibility, sensate
The past tense of sense is sensed.
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".
The word sensed is the past tense of the verb to sense.
Zebras do not have any special or unique senses.
Marty sensed that his baseball team was in trouble. 'sensed' is the verb. sensed. I know that sensed is a verb because you can do this to it: I sense We sense You sense You sense (plural) He senses They Sense She Senses ---- Easy way to remember is that a verb is a doing word. Anything you do is a verb. e.g. ran, walked, read,
The sense organ involved in sensing a pin prick is the skin. When a pin pricks the skin, specialized nerve endings called nociceptors detect the sensation of pain and send signals to the brain to alert the body of potential harm. These signals are processed in the brain, which then interprets the sensation as pain.
Sense is already a verb in the right context. As in "to sense something".Other verbs for sense depending on the tense (excuse the rhyme there) is senses, sensed and sensing.Some example sentences are:"I sense a danger"."He is sensing danger"."He says he senses a danger"."I told you I sensed trouble".
The skin is both a sense and excretory organ.
Present perfect is formed with - have/has + past participle.Sense is a regular verb so the past participle is verb + -ed = sensed.I have sensed the dog is angry. -- I as subjectThey have sensed the dog is angry. -- plural pronoun subjectHe has sensed the dog is angry. -- singular pronoun subjectThe cat has sensed the dog is angry. -- singular noun subject