Sensory words to describe senses can include: aromatic, melodic, vibrant, tactile, savory.
Blustery, bleak, and blizzardy.
Good discriptive writing draws from the 5 senses of the human body. Try using some of these questions for the thing(s) your're describing: * How does it feel? * How does it taste? * How does it sound? * How does it sound * How does it smell? Remember, in descriptive writing, you are painting a picture using words.
your senses aretouchsmellsee-because its easy for you to catch .you have to start at small words then work up to big words.heartaste
Describing motion using words instead of numbers is called qualitative kinematics. This approach focuses on the characteristics of motion such as speed, direction, and changes in motion without quantifying them numerically.
Your pancreas will become inflamed, which in all senses is not good for your body.
deadlyinsecuremenacingperilousprecariousriskythreateningunstablevulnerable
it could be huimungus
yuck
obstinate and obtuse
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.
massive, clean/dirty, good/bad condition.
This imagery uses mostly visual and auditory senses, focusing on describing what can be seen and heard in the scene being depicted.
loving helpful nice cool encouraging adorable
smart, sensible
denying, contrasting, be at variance, challenging, debating, disputing
Verbs are words that convey an action, and are generally not considered as describing words. A good employee, however, would probably be engaging in some of these actions: communicating, organizing, problem-solving, planning, researching, achieving.
You describe anything the same way - tell how each of the senses reacts to it. What does it look like/ smell like, feel like, sound like, taste like?