I am intoxicated by the smell of the earth, after the first hint of rains, not for hurting you, but for giving my senses immeasurable pleasure. |
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All his senses were focussed upon the rabbits grazing dimwittedly over the open meadowland above their warren. |
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William's brisk tone went a long ways toward clearing up Drake's foggy mind and fuzzy senses. |
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The heart rate and breathing quickens, muscles become tense and senses become heightened. |
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To be an effective guard, the Komondor had to rely mostly on its own senses to detect and defend against danger. |
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I heard her laugh at me, which made my blind hate take control over all of my senses. |
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I am a sensitive, not in a supernatural sense, but my senses are very acute, my hearing is very acute. |
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Rhythms grow, and as they do so they distort and disfigure, becoming something like the post-punk you know, but wholly fresh to the senses. |
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The adrenalin and lactic acid had dulled the senses and for a moment she'd forgotten who she was and what was happening. |
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He is a knowledge worker in all senses of the word and carries a message everyone involved in best practise in education should hear. |
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Erianne always set his senses on heightened alarm, even now when she was an emotional whirlwind. |
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Pratyaahaar means withdrawal of senses from their objects and turning the mind inward. |
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My tail lashed from side to side as I began to feel the hunger and bloodlust of the panther rise to meet my own senses. |
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It is true that I have, like many who choose to write for a living, exaggerated senses of the absurd and the poignant. |
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I just got off the phone with him, and I think he senses that this is a whole new ballgame now. |
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The foxtails and other tall grasses swayed around and above me, their fragrance filled my senses. |
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Upon entering the room the sweetest smell of fresh fruits and warm pastries flooded their senses, followed by the smell of cooked bacon. |
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The myriad of colours and the sweet, fragrant scent of the blooms overwhelmed the senses to the point of excess. |
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If the system senses a child seat, distinguishable by the flat pattern, it will disable the air bag on the passenger side. |
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Fortunately, Congress came to their senses and put the kybosh on the whole sordid affair. |
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Electronic components are then wired on to the device to process information that it senses or to drive the movement of its mechanical parts. |
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Hopefully, the pathetic and woeful situation that has been allowed to arise will bring people to their senses, at least on the playing side. |
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When I came to my senses again, I was on my knees with JD kneeling beside me. |
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These tubes and shapes are redolent of the exterior world, yet they are also evocative of our skin, our interior bodies, our senses. |
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Other fragrant scents to human senses are most often those produced by flowers visited by pollinators. |
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It's hard to know when the car is mounting a full-frontal assault on every one of your senses. |
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Troodontids, judging from their cranial anatomy and cursorial adaptations, were likely agile, fast carnivores with acute senses. |
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One of the axioms of cyberculture is that the speed of telecommunications is dramatically impacting upon our senses. |
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The senses of smell and taste let you fully enjoy the flavors of foods and drinks, and the smells of flowers. |
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The gamma ray spectrometer suite is unique in that it senses the composition below the surface to a depth as great as one meter. |
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One senses that no one is paying a blind bit of attention, for the affairs of the province are as taboo in British society as coprophagy. |
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As Lester strongly points out, from simple lack of awareness we are deadening our senses by becoming tuned out. |
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What is this if not a sinister project of deadening the senses, so that destruction of life goes on as naturally as life itself? |
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In many senses, an especially beautiful literary expression of suicide that does not involve the death wish is in The Little Prince. |
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The photons that reached its senses followed paths that varied slightly from the straight-line geodesics of flat spacetime. |
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The system senses when the car is cornering and feeds more brake force to the outside front wheel to counteract the tendency to skid. |
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A flood of sweetness overwhelmed her senses, making Shirley dizzy with pleasure. |
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Her eyes snapped open, causing the sunlight to flood her senses, moments later she was still recovering. |
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Drinking a couple of glasses creates a feeling of euphoria and a heightening of the senses, at once stimulating and relaxing. |
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In 2004, EVO Fitness will introduce a treadmill with a computerized system that senses if users are pronating or supinating. |
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Full of delightfulness and delicateness, boldness and plain audacity, the album tantalizes all the senses. |
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It is not only our senses, but our very intuitive faculties that cease to provide us with the necessary adaptive knowledge. |
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On every balcony and at every window are flags, banners, and gonfalons in a riot of colors to rock your senses. |
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How much are our senses trained socially to respond to specific aspects of human beauty and desirability? |
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A Predator senses guard dogs and detects minefields in a swamp, or releases sample Hellfire munitions that neutralize their targets. |
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The size of a watch, the DRS device is activated by pushing the Panic Button or when the device senses you haven't moved around in a while. |
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Commonly there is a partitioning of sinistral and dextral criteria on alternate horizons, but horizons occur where both senses coexist. |
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After leaving Provence, grey skies and damp weather seem like an affront to the senses. |
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The love in the air was electric and both, even the one whose senses had ceased five years ago, could feel it. |
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With their unruly instincts and their tingling, uncharted senses, they have an electric effect. |
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However, as the transmission senses loss of traction, so more power is sent to the wheels with the most grip. |
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The rough stones jutting out from the gritty mud walls appeal to my visual and tactile senses. |
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He awed at the power flooding his senses, filling him with unsurpassed might. |
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On the other hand, if the cues from different senses are discordant, perception can be distorted. |
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For Zahar, the apparent difference between mass and energy arises from the contingent fact that our senses perceive mass and energy differently. |
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Having earlier looked back to see herself as a discord, Jane now directly disjoins the reader's senses. |
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The ominous and subtle variations are unnerving as they enkindle vague senses of dread. |
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Jeanne, his lovely, loving wife senses something has disturbed the stolid contentedness of her husband. |
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In doing so, mankind has become callous and his senses have become dull to the ultimate pleasure this relationship would offer. |
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If I should accede one day to Heaven, it must be there as it is here, except that I will be rid of my dull senses and my heavy bones. |
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But the stupid person is cold and fearful, through the dullness of his understanding and laziness of the senses. |
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Keenly mortified by the dullness of his senses and instincts, he knew he was no companion for Swinburne. |
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His head was still dizzy and his senses clouded, but one thing was for sure in his mind. |
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I certainly felt bound to the river for restoring my equilibrium, for calming my senses and for providing me with an escape from the city. |
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All such activities lead to achieving perfect mental equilibrium to control the senses. |
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So much emphasis is placed on exercising the body these days, but very little thought is given to enhancing the senses. |
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But when she is exiled to the cabin of her prospective husband, her senses as well as her principles revolt. |
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The idea of an omniscient, eternal, and infinite being, for example, could not be like anything the senses encountered. |
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Being summoned by a doting pet can be one of the more endearing ways to return to our senses. |
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Unfortunately, her senses weren't acute enough and he delivered a double-handed blow, which slammed her to the floor. |
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In this mode, the vehicle senses when increased engine braking is required and automatically schedules a downshift. |
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Alcohol impairs the senses, and people do all sorts of foolishness on the road when they drink and drive. |
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The product of aeons of evolution has enabled our minds to model the world around us based on the information gathered by our senses. |
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Vision and hearing are the aesthetic senses proper, according to traditional theory. |
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In such a case that imaginative faculty, formed as if in the shape of some animal, may appear to the senses of others. |
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My breath was stuck in my stomach, my limbs benumbed, my senses catapulted into a no-go area where terror meets exhilaration. |
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For Plato, our senses are deceptive and what we experience in our daily lives is not reality but the shadow of reality. |
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Tell me when the senses have ever seen a principle of nuclear microphysics. |
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Even if one is blessed with the senses of touch, smell, speech and hearing, it is sight that gives shape to imagination. |
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Five raised beds in the final design represent the five senses and each class in the school has a bed to fill. |
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He was often dazed and drifted out of his senses while staring emptily into nothingness. |
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The child I was back then was shocked out of my senses, only starring disbelievingly at her half opened gaze. |
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Better still, nobody in his senses will even argue that it can even in future earn profits. |
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But it did rain a couple of times, and he has arthritis, nobody in their senses would expect him to work in the wet. |
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Will we, as a people, come to our senses and restore the only REAL money there is? |
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I will go this time, if he does not come to his senses I shall deal with him. |
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The machinations of Booker juries are a smugly guarded secret, but one senses a good few compromises and second-bests here. |
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If Lance senses the slightest hint of disloyalty or lack of dedication, you're gone. |
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It comes as no surprise then to find that the expression has many different senses. |
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Claudia pretended that she was blind and had to depend upon her senses of hearing, touch and smell. |
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The wall will include different pieces of artwork to stimulate various senses including touch, smell, sight and sound. |
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We use our senses of sight, smell, hearing, and of course then we filter it through the psychological baggage we all carry around. |
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He still has back problems and has lost the senses of smell and taste, but has returned to college. |
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They were doing this with their hands in the dark with just a flashlight, and just using their senses of touch, smell and sight. |
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Remaining motionless seems to enable elephants to focus their keen senses of smell and hearing on unfamiliar noises and odors in the air. |
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But is it true what people say about the acuteness of senses of smell and taste being linked? |
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Get a sinus infection, or something head-cold related that muffles your senses of taste and smell for at least two weeks. |
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The entire place inside was built to stimulate the senses with such aesthetic beauty. |
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New Orleans, a melting pot of European culture in the South, is a treat for the senses. |
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Prince Vaji closed his eyes and allowed his immortal senses hear the mellifluous music, designed to ensnare the mind of its listener. |
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Sitting down in a chair, I focused my eyes and senses on your face and learnt the lessons of beauty. |
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She felt a burden lifting off her shoulders and smiled at the carefree feeling that permeated her senses. |
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The thurifer helps to engage all of our senses in prayer, heightening the solemnity of the liturgy. |
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The only properly basic propositions are those that are self-evident or incorrigible or evident to the senses. |
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Descartes distrusted the senses and the imagination, but the self as res cogitans stands squarely at the centre of his philosophy. |
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You might frighten her out of her senses, if it came to a struggle between you two men. |
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Living on a Marine base on the edge of restive Ramadi is a shock to a civilian's senses. |
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Advancing age is also associated with a decrease in the basal metabolic rate, as well as changes in the senses of taste and smell. |
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We know what our human senses tell us, and we usually reason from these senses according to a limited, this-worldly basis. |
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In some senses, the race is secondary to the social importance of this event. |
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Suddenly pain seared through his right cheek, bringing back his senses in a wave of madness. |
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It also speaks to the senses, the smell of the sand and the sea breeze, the warmth of the air. |
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We were still in a 30-degree angle of bank turn to the left, but my senses were telling me I was straight and level. |
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A goat and a couple of mangy dogs sniffed around them, their senses quickened by the smells from the next door kitchen. |
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That was when she gathered her senses and noticed the mosaic floor beneath her. |
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It is all very good but towards the end the power of music becomes taxing to the senses as too much cake would become to the stomach. |
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Each plant within the garden has an element which enhances the five senses, i.e. taste, hear, smell, touch and sight. |
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To fully appreciate the complexity of wine, the senses of sight, smell, taste and even touch must be employed. |
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So in addition to the usual five senses of sight, hearing, touch, taste, and smell, the mental function is counted as the sixth. |
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Sensory evaluation is analysis of product attributes perceived by the human senses of smell, taste, touch, sight, and hearing. |
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Nevertheless, the senses of smell, taste, and touch have not been neglected. |
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A nonspiritual person only lives by their five senses, touch, taste, sight, smell and hearing. |
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It claims to heighten the senses of taste, smell and touch by offering a dining experience in total darkness. |
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Other senses like touch, hearing, taste, smell and sight are derived from self-consciousness. |
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We perceive our environment via our senses of smell, touch, taste, hearing, sight. |
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One senses that it is a much-resisted process, full of compromises and awkwardnesses, but it proceeds nonetheless. |
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A drop of oil on a pillowcase will tantalise the senses for a romantic interlude, or help to lull you off to sleep. |
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Men and women across the nation go the movies and are dazzled by million dollar productions that tantalize the senses and expand the imagination. |
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Visually, the film also tantalizes the senses, with nearly every scene offering a riot of color. |
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Come back to where you belong, awaken your senses with the magical touch of nature. |
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But as Marcel Proust made clear with his madeleine, the visual is not always the most evocative of the senses. |
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Or was it the telecom bosses and their financiers who took leave of their senses? |
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But five months ago, the Washington Post editors completely took leave of their senses. |
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It's true what they say about heightened aural perception when you're deprived of your other senses. |
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A cacophony of sounds and flurry of images create a visual and auditory whirlpool for the senses. |
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When conflicts between the senses occur, vision tends to bias both auditory and tactile perception. |
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Silent and lumpish, he seems to live chiefly through the random fixations of his senses. |
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The beauty of talking dirty in the sack is that you communicate it's not only your body which is aroused but your senses and mind as well. |
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Beyond the senses is the mind, beyond the mind, pure intellect, beyond the intellect, the great atman, beyond the great atman, the Unmanifest. |
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This position goes against all appearances, which constrain our senses to believe that the sun is in continuous movement around the earth. |
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Stop waiting, and try these amazing products that will astoundingly delight all of your senses! |
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An audience that senses it is being indoctrinated is more likely to resist assimilating the information. |
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Ringing bells, whirring motors and flickering lights assailed the senses as one entered the darkened gallery from the street. |
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Again, Bruckner advances his tonal phrases upwards, an Austrian trait that delights the senses with rumbustious feelings. |
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Writing that, it occurs to me that film is the one art form that can fully flood one's senses. |
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Frankly, the worst thing about choruses is that they have absolutely rotten senses of humour. |
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Participation in Orthodox liturgical worship involves the body and all its senses. |
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The Hussites, on the other hand, who broke away from the Holy Roman Empire in both political and religious senses, were heretics. |
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In some senses, he represents the latest incarnation of an archetype that crops up time and again in popular music. |
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The main reason is the bricks-and-mortar approach, in the metaphorical and literal senses. |
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Saul senses in Eliza a natural aptitude for mysticism, blossoming from the way in which the letters seem to appear to her in a vision. |
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While humans may experience the senses in some fundamental way, lingual evolution comes out of necessity and transition within specific cultures. |
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Fear, and something else, possibly hatred or revengefulness, brought her back to her senses. |
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My senses finally rushing back to me, I found my legs and charged out of the elevator with a vivacity that I didn't even know I possessed. |
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Many other animals have sense organs that can detect stimuli beyond the confines of the human senses. |
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Montgomerie is equally tentative, possibly because he senses Kidd's ambivalence. |
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I believe that we can understand ceremony as a cosmogony in both discursive and performative senses. |
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Rachel remained silent as the memories and remembrances from years past assaulted her senses and her calm. |
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Why not get some fragrance releasers into your space ready to set your senses racing once the weather warms up again? |
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Quite clearly the youth of France cannot come to their senses because they are out of their box on a tequila flavoured beer. |
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It is true there are some senses in which we may allowably talk of the Visible and Invisible Church. |
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On regathering his senses, Dr T is summoned into a rustic dwelling inside which a woman is giving birth. |
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He then felt his senses taking control as he wrapped his own arms round her and gave her a small squeeze. |
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Maybe the cold coffee had heightened my senses, or possibly because it was a nice day more people were requesting drinks involving the blender. |
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Stark himself recognizes different senses of secularization when he insists that scholars not shift their ground in order to avoid embarrassment to the theory. |
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Yes, in some senses, it does seem to work as I would like to think, reaching deeper inside, able to touch on some levels which more conventional work cannot. |
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But the king is inveterately prey to the hungers of the senses, ad pleads pitifully with son after son to take on his senility and gift him youth for some time more. |
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One senses that he misses being in a classroom discoursing with students. |
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It charges you, it puts a dance in your step, it clears the fog from your senses and plugs you in to a glowing, blaring night that can be yours again. |
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We are free and the consciousness of the material world of the senses stands before us as something strange and foreign which no longer wears us down. |
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Might a punk rock instrumentation of a crab canon wake the senses up? |
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With these e-bikes, an electric motor starts when it senses you pedalling too hard, usually on starts and going up hills, stopping when you're done straining. |
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A sweet gauze of confusion has settled around her senses, and that helps. |
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Some prickly problems of racial and economic accessibility that one senses when visiting the country's galleries and museums were nowhere in evidence. |
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For the past 10 years he has lived with his family in New York, and a reader senses in his rather elaborate approach a gingerliness about going back. |
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Often using obscene, offensive and profane language she succeeds in shocking the reader out of the middle-class complacency that numbs the senses of the public. |
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In active electroreception, the animal senses its surrounding environment by generating electric fields and detecting distortions in these fields using electroreceptor organs. |
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The programmer will need to enter, laboriously, for each word in the system's lexicon, the different senses and the associated encyclopaedic knowledge. |
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I am not particularly strong, I lack speed, my senses are dull in comparison, my eyesight sucks, my sense of smell and that of hearing are almost negligible. |
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He believes that consuming the spirit on a regular basis gives him the strength of a tiger and the senses of a predator. |
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The young man's head was bandaged, disabling all of the most primal senses, save touch which now burned beneath the abrasive tethers on his wrists. |
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I have suffered to the limit of my endurance, but I will never in my sane senses surrender to the evil power that has fixed its roots like a cancer on the world. |
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Electric guitars, souped up accordions and samples of bagpipe music, the instruments were the only electrifying aspect of the assault to the senses. |
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The Rakshasas robbed people of their senses and 'possessed' them. |
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Often, empiricism is contrasted with rationalism, a theory which holds that the mind may apprehend some truths directly, without requiring the medium of the senses. |
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Deer are extremely cautious animals with keen senses of smell and hearing. |
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After almost a minute of this strange outburst, he came to his senses and slowly pulled himself into a sitting position, wincing in pain with every agonizing inch. |
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The reenactments don't always work so smoothly, but the tales of enduring romance and the subjects' senses of humour will win you over, without a doubt. |
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No matter how wordy the material he begins with, this Russian-born director's work always emphasizes experiencing the story viscerally, through the senses. |
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As they kept going, the amount of trees reduced, but she also noticed with her now keen senses that there were more animals as she heard more rustling sounds. |
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The mechanism by which the body senses and responds to changes in blood pressure by reflex vasodilation or contraction of peripheral vessels is impaired. |
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The film overcomes the senses, relentlessly engaging the spectator's gaze. |
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Tap into your senses to relish the last lazy days of summer. |
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He argues that air must be soluble in water, for fish respire as we do, and air is required for the senses of hearing and smell, which fish clearly possess. |
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Sleep deprivation lowers leptin, a blood protein that suppresses appetite and seems to affect how the brain senses when the body has had enough food. |
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Essentially, the system senses the driving conditions and makes corrections and adjustments as required, but in such a way that it is more anticipative rather than reactive. |
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I came to my senses as I was still levitating just above my seat. |
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A reader senses both storyteller and critic fighting for full expression on the page, one facet overlaying the other. |
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The senses of rhetoric deployed here are quite narrow, invoking what ancient rhetoricians would have thought of as the third and fifth canons of rhetoric respectively. |
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While not necessarily explicit advocates of anti-noise regulation, the writings of these individuals exemplified the martialing of the senses to describe the urban populace. |
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Instead, one is confronted by visual confusion, conscious of the physical self caught in the act of apprehending through the senses without understanding via the intellect. |
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But the perceptions of the senses are a low form of apprehension. |
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Challenge your senses with the smelliest washed-rind cheese, Epoisses, and a full-bodied red wine like Gevrey Chambertin. |
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With his peroxide head bowed, eyes closed, the old man feels his way forward, bandy legs shuffling, shoulders stooped, senses bat sharp, as keen as razor wire. |
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I felt sleepy and relaxed now, and that loosened my tongue and my senses. |
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They say love is blind, but Kelly must have lost all her senses. |
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After a few minutes, I came to my senses enough to see an angry mob standing on the railway platform. |
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But you cannot deny that when you go you are experiencing the show through all of your senses. |
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Their oddity is that Lombardi's craftsmanship is so exquisite that one senses him helplessly luxuriating in the very complexity that he claims to find so suspicious. |
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He is old and senile, and sometimes takes leave of his senses. |
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She truly does take leave of her senses where her Earl is concerned. |
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The Protestant planters and their co-religionists settled on the right, in both senses, bank of the River Foyle, a well-situated salubrious suburb called Waterside. |
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The tang of the luscious dishes, some of them on display and others being cooked, continue to tantalize your senses as you walk along the tables set in a row. |
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And now she sat on the floor in her sunny yellow room, where those agonizingly sweet childhood remembrances tickled and tantalized her senses and swept her away from reality. |
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Kevin's senses came to him slowly as he awoke into consciousness again. |
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Since he had sated his hunger he found that his senses were even sharper. |
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Irene has eyes like a hawk and radar ears, nothing slips by her senses. |
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His sons refused, thinking that their father was not in his senses. |
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Walking through the spiral hallway into the almost pitch black, circular room, the senses become immediately disoriented. |
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Clearly, the thermistor in a pulmonary artery catheter that senses the temperature of mixed venous blood provides the best measurement of core body temperature. |
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When I walk through it, the thick odor of leather assaults my senses. |
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The Creator gave me eyes and senses to thrill to the appeal of femininity. |
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He has come to his senses and the conservatives are out for his blood. |
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The senses of dislocation and loss found when we attempt to narrativise history are embodied in the structure of the creative component of my thesis. |
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I watched his semaphoric interchange with the conductor, his head-tip, cocking an ear toward his own hands, his right foot in rhythm with his senses on the pedal. |
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The pure process of cycling undoubtedly brings about a much closer relationship with the countryside, and sharpens one's senses of hearing and smell. |
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Crocodilians' senses of smell, sight, and hearing are well developed. |
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Note that when used with a compact fluorescent bulb, the local control mode in the appliance module often senses a small current flow and keeps turning on. |
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Quickly coming to his senses, he reached and grabbed a shirt and pulled it over his head, cursing at himself for creating the already awkward situation more awkward. |
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There is no reason to believe that they have come to their senses. |
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No one in his senses doubts the existence of material objects. |
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And a ferocious bellow of rage brought the girl back to her senses. |
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Future mobile phones will not be handheld, but rather screenless touchless devices offering us mixed reality vision, networking our senses and brains. |
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I was trampled in the rush, but regained my senses enough to join them. |
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The longest entry in the OED2 was for the verb set, which required 60,000 words to describe some 430 senses. |
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Sensation Science Centre in the Greenmarket is a science centre based on the five senses with a series of interactive shows and exhibits. |
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Words can be synonymous when meant in certain senses, even if they are not synonymous in all of their senses. |
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That is, it can be taken to say that whatever we find in the intellect is also incipiently in the senses. |
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During the 13th century Thomas Aquinas adopted the Aristotelian position that the senses are essential to mind into scholasticism. |
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Spotlighting can help to create the feeling of space while chromatherapy lighting can help soothe the senses. |
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This view is commonly contrasted with rationalism, which states that knowledge may be derived from reason independently of the senses. |
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While chronoception is typically not listed with the more traditional senses, we should consider including it. |
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This may be ascribed to the fact that the verbs of senses are the most common verbs that have copular uses. |
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A central concept in science and the scientific method is that it must be empirically based on the evidence of the senses. |
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Despite this, Greater London is commonly regarded as a city in the general senses of a conurbation and a municipality. |
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Writing chases after the senses and conveys them in an altered form. |
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The little girl already senses the appeal and attraction of a Britney Spears, a cross between Barbie and her little sister, Skipper. |
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The police condemn them and argue that drivers should obey speed limits at all times, not merely when a device senses a radar trap. |
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And yett here is something about this sporting mecca that makes the senses tingle a little more than any other. |
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Lawrence points out that wine tasting uses almost all the senses, so the right stemware is critical. |
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Their senses are finely tuned to an accipitrine world, finding private meaning as does the falcon in bird calls. |
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The poor wretch, who lay motionless a long time, just began to recover his senses as a stage-coach came by. |
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Our senses, our instincts, our intellections are all instruments of adaptation. |
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Enclosed you will find tropical scented massage cream to arouse the senses and tealites to create a relaxing candle lit setting. |
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The centuries-old philosophic logion tells us that whatever is in the intellect was first in the senses. |
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He drowned his stomach and senses with a large draught and ingurgitation of wine. |
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She plainly said that men seemed to take leave of their senses as soon as women were concerned. |
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His sacramentalism, molded by Scotus and the Spiritual Exercises, gave him warrant for the use of the senses. |
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Although touch, or tactition, is considered one of the five traditional human senses, touch is just one component of the somatosensory system. |
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His senses reeled amid the din and rattle of classes where discipline was unknown and intelligence almost indiscoverable. |
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With these supersharp senses, the shark has an excellent design for hunting. |
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Dreams may be absurd in nature but the senses are not able to discern whether they are real or not. |
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Dreams do not involve actually sensing a stimulus because, as discussed, the senses do not work as they normally do during sleep. |
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Also, not all of the senses are inactive during sleep, only the ones that are weary. |
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She remained stone-still, ready for anything, sending her heightened senses in search of who or what was encroaching on her personal space. |
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Always keep your radar up and, if you feel your spider senses tingling, they're tingling for a reason. |
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When it senses danger, the bombardier beetle fires a scorching spray from its rear abdomen. |
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Sounds and some tangible qualities solicit their proper senses, and force an entrance to the mind. |
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Hyacinth perfume tickled her senses, making her feel giddy, but she saddened when she saw how uncared for the garden was. |
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Martineau began losing her senses of taste and smell at a young age, becoming increasingly deaf and having to use an ear trumpet. |
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Somewhere in the cruise-control synapses of McFaul's beigeist brain, he senses that his arrest and trial is a real possibility. |
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In both senses, an axiom is any mathematical statement that serves as a starting point from which other statements are logically derived. |
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Various figurative senses of the word have been extended from its original sense. |
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Some dictionaries include additional senses equating acronym with initialism. |
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The media's representation of this wonderful occasion is a tawdry assault on our senses in the name of commercialism and bulimic excess. |
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The horses' senses are based on their status as prey animals, where they must be aware of their surroundings at all times. |
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The topics covered by current exhibitions include junior engineering, human health, the five senses, Earth sciences and biodiversity. |
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In addition to superb eyesight and hearing, zebras also have acute senses of smell and taste. |
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I guess at this point we were supposed to feel elated she'd come to her senses and decided she hearts dogs after all. |
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Here, more than anywhere else, sensing Spaces awakens our senses. |
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An uncluttered check-out area won't overload the senses and it keeps customers happy. |
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However, and especially under slavery in broader senses of the word, slaves may have some rights and protections according to laws or customs. |
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Caesar, known for giving his potential enemies every last chance, entertained the idea that Ariovistus was coming to his senses. |
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Art is something that stimulates an individual's thoughts, emotions, beliefs, or ideas through the senses. |
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Crocodiles have acute senses, an evolutionary advantage that makes them successful predators. |
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We have no need of doctorall consultations or collegian interpretations. Our senses tell us where it is and what it is. |
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Gibbs and Matlock, for instance, have shown how different senses of the English verb make cooccur with particular syntactic frames. |
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Lizards make use of their senses of sight, touch, olfaction and hearing like other vertebrates. |
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The lexical disambiguation relies on looking ahead to identify possible senses. |
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Shrews have poor eyesight and instead use their excellent senses of smell and hearing to find food. |
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My confused senses received a dull roar of pounding feet and dinning voices as the herald of victory. |
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Like many other herbivores, antelopes rely on keen senses to avoid predators. |
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By KRIYA, the outgoing life force is not wasted and abused in the senses, but constrained to reunite with subtler spinal energies. |
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Many fish also have chemoreceptors that are responsible for extraordinary senses of taste and smell. |
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Obiism and Fanteeism have been exercised in my own presence, and their results proved by the evidence of my own eyes and other senses. |
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The Indian violin, while essentially the same instrument as that used in Western music, is different in some senses. |
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Sight and hearing are the wildcat's primary senses when hunting, its sense of smell being comparatively weak. |
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Roast pork with rosemary caramelised apples will delight the senses with its flurry of flavours. |
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The eyes of the wood-cutter flash like actual possession. He seems now to have come into his own. With all his senses, he is dominant, sure. |
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Fortunately, all involved came to their senses and eventually agreed upon the much snappier Liverpool City Region Combined Authority name. |
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