| sensibility | Origin: Cf. F. Sensibilite, LL. Sensibilitas. 1. <physiology> The quality or state of being sensible, or capable of sensation; capacity to feel or perceive. 2. The capacity of emotion or feeling, as distinguished from the intellect and the will; peculiar susceptibility of impression, pleasurable or painful; delicacy of feeling; quick emotion or sympathy; as, sensibility to pleasure or pain; sensibility to shame or praise; exquisite sensibility; often used in the plural. "Sensibilities so fine!" "The true lawgiver ought to have a heart full of sensibility." (Burke) "His sensibilities seem rather to have been those of patriotism than of wounded pride." (Marshall) 3. Experience of sensation; actual feeling. "This adds greatly to my sensibility." (Burke) 4. That quality of an instrument which makes it indicate very slight changes of condition; delicacy; as, the sensibility of a balance, or of a thermometer. Synonym: Taste, susceptibility, feeling. See Taste. Source: Websters Dictionary (01 Mar 1998) |
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| articular sensibility | Appreciation of sensation in joint surfaces. Synonym: arthresthesia, joint sense. (05 Mar 2000) |
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| bone sensibility | The appreciation of vibration, a form of pressure sense; most acute when a vibrating tuning fork is applied over a bony prominence. Synonym: bone sensibility, pallesthetic sensibility, vibratory sensibility. Origin: G. Pallo, to quiver, + aisthesis, sensation (05 Mar 2000) |
| pallesthetic sensibility | The appreciation of vibration, a form of pressure sense; most acute when a vibrating tuning fork is applied over a bony prominence. Synonym: bone sensibility, pallesthetic sensibility, vibratory sensibility. Origin: G. Pallo, to quiver, + aisthesis, sensation (05 Mar 2000) |
| vibratory sensibility | The appreciation of vibration, a form of pressure sense; most acute when a vibrating tuning fork is applied over a bony prominence. Synonym: bone sensibility, pallesthetic sensibility, vibratory sensibility. Origin: G. Pallo, to quiver, + aisthesis, sensation (05 Mar 2000) |
| mesoblastic sensibility | The sensation felt in muscle when it is contracting; awareness of movement or activity in muscles or joints; sense of position or movement mediated in large part by the posterior columns and medial lemniscus. See: bathyesthesia. Synonym: deep sensibility, kinesthetic sense, mesoblastic sensibility, muscular sense, myoesthesis, myoesthesia. Origin: G. Mys, muscle, + aisthesis, sensation (05 Mar 2000) |
| cortical sensibility | The integration of sensory stimuli by the cerebral cortex. (05 Mar 2000) |
| proprioceptive sensibility | <physiology> Capable of receiving stimuli originating in muscles, tendons, and other internal tissues. Origin: L. Proprius, one's own, + capio, to take (05 Mar 2000) |
| protopathic sensibility | See: protopathic. (05 Mar 2000) |
| splanchnesthetic sensibility | The perception of the existence of the internal organs. Synonym: seventh sense, splanchnesthesia, splanchnesthetic sensibility. (05 Mar 2000) |
| deep sensibility | bathyesthesia, myesthesia |
| dissociation sensibility | The loss of the pain and the thermal senses with preservation of tactile sensibility or vice versa. (05 Mar 2000) |
| electromuscular sensibility | Sensibility of muscular tissue to stimulation by electricity. (05 Mar 2000) |
| epicritic sensibility | See: epicritic. (05 Mar 2000) |
| sensibility |
mental responsiveness and awareness refined sensitivity to pleasurable or painful impressions; "cruelty offended his sensibility" sensitivity: (physiology) responsiveness to external stimuli; the faculty of sensation; "sensitivity to pain"
Ãâó: wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
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| sensibility |
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Ãâó: www.mercksource.com/pp/us/cns/cns_hl_dorlands.jspz...
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| sensibility |
[L:11] The faculty of intuitions, opposed to the faculty of concepts, the understanding. [L:40] Sensibility can also be viewed as the faculty of receptivity (ie, to the action of affecting objects on our minds), in which case it is opposed to the understanding as the faculty of spontaneity. ...
Ãâó: www.texttribe.com/text/kant_glossary.htm
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| sensibility |
??ensitive feeling, emotion.?The term arose early in the eighteenth century to denote the tender undercurrent of feeling in the NEOCLASSICAL PERIOD and continued through Jane Austen? Sense and Sensibility?Holman 425).?br>
Ãâó: english.montclair.edu/isaacs/605LitResearch/literm...
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| sensibility | (physiology) responsiveness to external stimuli |
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| sensibility | mental responsiveness and awareness |
| sensibility | refined sensitivity to pleasurable or painful impressions |
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