If you mean human faculties such as sight, smell, hearing, taste or touch, then 'sense' is correct. As a matter of some little interest, there is a River Sence flowing in England
The correct spelling is "I vacuumed her."
In French, "so am I" can be spelled as "moi aussi."
In America we spell it plow. In England they spell it plough. It's been said that we Americans shorten several English words so our printer cartridges will last longer. :)
In Polish Sandra has the same letters as in English, so you simply spell "Sandra".
The correct spelling is "literally." It means in a literal or exact sense, without exaggeration.
Your question makes no sense. Could you rephrase it so that we can understand what you need to know?
sense as in common sense or a sense of style or the five senses
sense*
They both contain letters of the alphabet which both are made by sound and when you spell something it becomes a word which you read so in order to read something you have to spell it and in order to spell it you have to know how to read it. Does that make sense. mmm
Well, sense you don't know how to spell AFRICA, I take it you don't live there. So why do you care?
18, dumbas.. That is common sence So is knowing how to spell "dumb@ss" and "sense."
what dude spell it right that does not even make any sense so enter it again.
robo, hurto (in the sense of 'loot')
it absorbs the spell so that you get a portion of magicka in which the spell is so if the spell they used needs 90 magicka and your spell absorption is 15% then you get 15% of their spell :)
Irish has no equivalent to 'yes' and 'no' in the English sense.
spell check, dictionaries, common sense (saying the word slowly aloud) spell check.
that depends on what you mean:fall in the sense of the (down)fall: der Falland in the sense of to fall: fallenfall in the sense of autum: der Herbst