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NOTICING |
Perceiving |
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SMELLING |
Perceiving odours |
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COSENTIENT |
Perceiving together. |
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OMNIPERCIPIENT |
Perceiving everything. |
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PERCEIVANCE |
Power of perceiving. |
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HEARING |
Faculty of perceiving sounds |
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PRESENTIENT |
Feeling or perceiving beforehand. |
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EXTERNALITY |
Separation from the perceiving mind. |
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ANIMADVERSAL |
The faculty of perceiving; a percipient. |
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ANIMADVERSIVE |
Having the power of perceiving; percipient. |
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IMPERCIPIENT |
Not perceiving, or not able to perceive. |
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PERCIPIENCY |
The faculty, act or power of perceiving; perception. |
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HEAR |
To have the sense or faculty of perceiving sound. |
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PERCIPIENT |
Having the faculty of perception; perceiving; as, a
percipient being. |
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INSENSIBLE |
Destitute of the power of feeling or perceiving;
wanting bodily sensibility. |
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EXTERNAL |
Outside of or separate from ourselves; (Metaph.) separate
from the perceiving mind. |
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INTUITIVE |
Knowing, or perceiving, by intuition; capable of knowing
without deduction or reasoning. |
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REPERCEPTION |
The act of perceiving again; a repeated perception of
the same object. |
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ANIMADVERSION |
The act or power of perceiving or taking notice;
direct or simple perception. |
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DEAFEN |
To make deaf; to deprive of the power of hearing; to
render incapable of perceiving sounds distinctly. |
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SIGHT |
The power of seeing; the faculty of vision, or of
perceiving objects by the instrumentality of the eyes. |
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BLETONISM |
The supposed faculty of perceiving subterraneous springs
and currents by sensation; -- so called from one Bleton, of France. |
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PERCEPTIVE |
Of or pertaining to the act or power of perceiving;
having the faculty or power of perceiving; used in perception. |
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TASTING |
The act of perceiving or tasting by the organs of taste;
the faculty or sense by which we perceive or distinguish savors. |
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OUTNESS |
The state or quality of being distanguishable from the
perceiving mind, by being in space, and possessing marerial quality;
externality; objectivity. |