dark,colorful,chubby,bright,round,cicular, curved, broad,foggy, fuzzy, portly, clean, crooked, sunny, cute,billowy.
lovely
Beautiful
Yes. An oxymoron is statement where the two adjectives contridict each other, such as blinding sight, almost there, skinny cow, absolutely not, etc.
You're describing a mirage... a 'vision' that's not really there.
Awesome is not a verb. A verb is an action, and you can't awesome. It is an adjective describing something, such as "an awesome sight."
the claws of a jackel thrust deep inside my mind. a sickly sight for my blind eyes.
desensitized
Beth Johnson uses the senses of sight, sound, smell, taste, and touch in describing Lou's Place. She paints a vivid picture of the atmosphere and experience at the bar by appealing to these senses in her writing.
Actually all of them, because qualitative means to take in by all of the senses. EX:Sound, Sight, Taste, Smell, and the feel of it.
Riis is describing the experience of navigating through darkness or unfamiliar surroundings using senses other than sight, such as touch or sound. By "feeling your way," he means relying on tactile sensations and other sensory inputs to understand and navigate the environment.
Two forms of imagery used by writers are visual imagery, which appeals to the sense of sight by describing how something looks, and auditory imagery, which appeals to the sense of hearing by describing sounds. Writers use these forms of imagery to create vivid sensory experiences for the reader.
In sensory imagery, you would find descriptive words that appeal to the five senses: sight, sound, taste, touch, and smell. These words can be adjectives, adverbs, or even onomatopoeias that create vivid images and sensations in the reader's mind.