| 释义 | 
		Definition of sensate in English: sensateadjective ˈsɛnseɪtˈsɛnsətˈsenˌsāt Perceiving or perceived by the senses. 感觉到的 Example sentencesExamples -  We live in a world where we are bombarded with information and sensate 'noise'.
 -  The real debate is between those who want to enjoy the fruits of prosperity and those who want an austere existence free from sensate temptation of any kind.
 -  In ancient times, death in the Golden Age was always incorporated into life as a sensate pleasure, followed immediately by an improved condition.
 -  Postmodern art's initial penchant toward video and television has created a marked backlash preoccupation with physical immediacy and in-your-face sensate experiences.
 -  Some of the most beautiful, graceful, and artistic performances are the result of this drive for physical, sensate expression.
 -  Animals appeal to our sensate selves with their tactile features and wild demeanors.
 -  For me, the benefits are intellectual, emotional and sensate; I'd like others to experience the pleasures that a theoretical appreciation of cinema offers.
 -  Deep partial-thickness burns that are sensate but do not blanch well are usually treated with topical antibiotics.
 -  Today's youth clearly live in a more affluent, sensate society than that of their grandfathers, indeed even of their fathers.
 -  The robot I'm working on will be two-armed, mobile, sensate, and articulate.
 -  Focusing, respectively, as their titles suggest, on beauty and the immediacy of sensate experience, they deliberately skirted the social consciousness which was so prominently on display in Lyon.
 -  This is really a form of art which has a lot of bodily and sensate involvement.
 -  According to Sorokin, the sensate society that we know today is moving towards inevitable collapse and this is connected with the successes of science and materialism.
 -  During earlier periods in the history of film theory, there had been various attempts to understand the meaningful relation between cinema and our sensate bodies.
 -  A structured process then ensues that involves discretely identifying cognitive, emotive and sensate aspects of the problem, in the light of the patient's experience.
 -  Patricia wants to highlight the idea that being sensate is not a uniquely human experience.
 -  This resembles the deadening of the emotions paradoxically required for the exquisitely heightened sensate perception in the Marquis de Sade's novels.
 -  In San Diego, the Navy is building a "sensate liner" - an intelligent set of long johns woven from conductive polymers that would tell medics what was wrong with a wounded soldier and how soon they should get there.
 -  Because the campus is punctuated by a series of natural and man-made lakes, streams and fountains, water plays an important sensate role in the psyche of the community.
 -  Her style is spare and simple, matching her Zen-like attention to present-consciousness, sensate learning, and spiritual connection.
 
 
 OriginMid 17th century: from late Latin sensatus 'having senses', from sensus (see sense).    Definition of sensate in US English: sensateadjectiveˈsenˌsāt Perceiving or perceived by the senses. 感觉到的 Example sentencesExamples -  Deep partial-thickness burns that are sensate but do not blanch well are usually treated with topical antibiotics.
 -  Animals appeal to our sensate selves with their tactile features and wild demeanors.
 -  This is really a form of art which has a lot of bodily and sensate involvement.
 -  Focusing, respectively, as their titles suggest, on beauty and the immediacy of sensate experience, they deliberately skirted the social consciousness which was so prominently on display in Lyon.
 -  Today's youth clearly live in a more affluent, sensate society than that of their grandfathers, indeed even of their fathers.
 -  Some of the most beautiful, graceful, and artistic performances are the result of this drive for physical, sensate expression.
 -  For me, the benefits are intellectual, emotional and sensate; I'd like others to experience the pleasures that a theoretical appreciation of cinema offers.
 -  Patricia wants to highlight the idea that being sensate is not a uniquely human experience.
 -  During earlier periods in the history of film theory, there had been various attempts to understand the meaningful relation between cinema and our sensate bodies.
 -  Her style is spare and simple, matching her Zen-like attention to present-consciousness, sensate learning, and spiritual connection.
 -  A structured process then ensues that involves discretely identifying cognitive, emotive and sensate aspects of the problem, in the light of the patient's experience.
 -  The real debate is between those who want to enjoy the fruits of prosperity and those who want an austere existence free from sensate temptation of any kind.
 -  Postmodern art's initial penchant toward video and television has created a marked backlash preoccupation with physical immediacy and in-your-face sensate experiences.
 -  According to Sorokin, the sensate society that we know today is moving towards inevitable collapse and this is connected with the successes of science and materialism.
 -  We live in a world where we are bombarded with information and sensate 'noise'.
 -  This resembles the deadening of the emotions paradoxically required for the exquisitely heightened sensate perception in the Marquis de Sade's novels.
 -  In ancient times, death in the Golden Age was always incorporated into life as a sensate pleasure, followed immediately by an improved condition.
 -  Because the campus is punctuated by a series of natural and man-made lakes, streams and fountains, water plays an important sensate role in the psyche of the community.
 -  The robot I'm working on will be two-armed, mobile, sensate, and articulate.
 -  In San Diego, the Navy is building a "sensate liner" - an intelligent set of long johns woven from conductive polymers that would tell medics what was wrong with a wounded soldier and how soon they should get there.
 
 
 OriginMid 17th century: from late Latin sensatus ‘having senses’, from sensus (see sense).     |