Sensory words are words/adjectives pertaining to the five senses---taste, touch, smell, sight, sound.
Some examples are:
Taste:
Sweet, salty, sour, spicy
Touch:
Soft, cool, wet, silky, sandy, cold, rough, sharp
Smell:
Acrid, scented, pungent, burnt, fragrant
Sight:
Blue, bright, shiny, opaque
Sound:
Loud, grating, whispered, silent
Sensory language uses words and descriptions to evoke a reader's senses such as sight, sound, taste, touch, and smell. It helps create a vivid and immersive experience for the reader by appealing to their sensory perceptions.
Anything you can smell, touch,taste.
Imagery
Its is detailing line of acsois
Sensory language is language that appeals to your senses and allows you to sense what's being said. Onomatopoeia is an example of sensory language. Words like creamy, sparkly, silky, and crisp are also examples of sensory language.
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Sensory Sensation
Bright, vivid, clear, vibrant.
Sensory, sensation, sensitive, consensus. That's all the words I know with "sens" in it.
Sensory words are any words which describe the senses and as such, it would be up to the writer/reader to determine if they are being used figuratively in a sentence/line. For instance, the strawberry was sweet. Sweet is a sensory word (taste). He was sweet on her. "Sweet on" is an idiom which figuratively means "he likes her".
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Sour, bitter, sweet, salty, umami.