If you are talking about senses, like your 5 senses, then it is called 'sens'.
The five senses for spring are: sight (blooming flowers and green leaves), smell (fragrant blossoms and fresh rain), touch (soft grass and cool breezes), taste (fresh fruits and vegetables), and sound (birds chirping and gentle rain).
When writing, appealing to the five senses (sight, smell, taste, touch, sound) can help to create a more immersive and engaging experience for the reader. By describing sensory details, such as the aroma of freshly baked bread or the sound of crashing waves, writers can evoke emotions and paint vivid scenes in the reader's mind. This technique can make a story more dynamic and memorable.
Smell.
Some examples of other senses include proprioception (sense of body position), vestibular sense (sense of balance and spatial orientation), and thermoception (sense of temperature).
Sight, sound, touch, taste, & smell are the "standard list" of external senses.
Sight, Sound, Smell, Taste, Touch
Of course they do. They have the same 5 senses that you have (like all mammals)!
Anything to do with your 5 senses is linking. Sight, Touch, Smell, Sound, and Taste.
If you are talking about senses, like your 5 senses, then it is called 'sens'.
The sound of cows kicking the barn door
why are they not becuse they have the 5 senses like us
they are like us because they all have 5 senses and maybe even six senses and they all have bones and brains so in a way they are like us
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.
The 5 senses are hearing, sight, smell, taste, and touch.
Yes, most people with synesthesia have the "five senses", unless of course they have a disability, in which case they would obviously not.
The 5 senses were said to be a basis for survival. Now in this age, we can survive without one.