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If you are talking about senses, like your 5 senses, then it is called 'sens'.
Nonsense : n. non-sens; absurdité; bêtise
Common sense is "le bon sens" in French. You could also hear the more literary (or at least used a high level of language) expression "le sens commun", but this is much less in use.
Les cinq sens, la vue, l'ouie, le toucher, l'odorat, le goût.
Pourquoi means 'why' in French.
'tu sens mauvais' is "you're smelling awfully bad".
Tu me sens means 'do you feel me?' (could mean 'smell' instead of 'feel' depending of the context).
'le goût' means the taste in French.
je sens is 'I feel' or 'I smell' in French.
If you are talking about senses, like your 5 senses, then it is called 'sens'.
je me sens ignoré(e)
Je me sens un peu mieux, merci means I feel a little better, thank you.
In French, you can say "Ça n'a aucun sens." or "Cela n'a aucun sens." to express "That makes no sense."
je me sens fou, je me sens folle
sens ça (imperative)
"Each time I feel happier" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Chaque fois je me sens plus heureux.Specifically, the feminine/masculine adjective chaque is "each". The feminine noun fois means "time". The personal pronoun jemeans "I". The reflexive pronoun me means "myself". The verb sens means "(I) am feeling, do feel, feel". The comparative plus means "more". The masculine adjective heureuxtranslates as "happy".The pronunciation will be "shahk fwah zhuh muh saw plyoo-zuh-ruh" in French.
'les cinq sens' are 'the five senses' in French. Le gout (also spelled goût) is the taste.