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单词 sensible
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sensibleadj.n.adv.

Brit. /ˈsɛnsᵻbl/, U.S. /ˈsɛnsəbəl/
Forms:

α. Middle English censible, Middle English sensibele, Middle English sensibile, Middle English sensibyl, Middle English sensibyll, Middle English (1600s Scottish) sensibel, Middle English–1500s sencyble, Middle English–1500s sensibil, Middle English–1500s sensibill, Middle English–1600s sensyble, Middle English– sensible, 1500s sensybul, 1500s sensybyl, 1500s sensybyll, 1500s–1600s sencible, 1500s–1600s senseble, 1600s sencibele, 1600s senciblle (Scottish), 1700s senceible; Irish English 1800s sincible.

β. 1500s–1600s sensable, 1600s senceable, 1600s senseable, 1700s sinceable (nonstandard); also Scottish pre-1700 censable, pre-1700 sansabale, pre-1700 senceable, pre-1700 sensabil, pre-1700 sensdbill, pre-1700 sensabyl.

Origin: Of multiple origins. Partly a borrowing from French. Partly a borrowing from Latin. Etymons: French sensible; Latin sensibilis.
Etymology: < (i) Anglo-Norman sencible, Anglo-Norman and Middle French, French sensible designating the faculty of sensation (1265 in Old French in ame sensible ), having the faculty of sensation or sense perception (1314, originally with reference to a nerve), perceptible by the senses (c1320), acutely felt (beginning of the 15th cent. or earlier), emotionally conscious (1610 in the passage translated in quot. 1614 at sense A. 13, or earlier), and its etymon (ii) classical Latin sensibilis capable of being apprehended by the senses, perceptible, capable of sensation, in post-classical Latin also endowed with perception, intelligent (4th cent.), carnal, sensual (13th cent. or earlier) < sens- , past participial stem of sentīre to perceive, feel (see sentient adj.) + -ibilis -ible suffix. Compare Catalan sensible (14th cent.), Spanish sensible (end of the 13th cent.), Portuguese sensível (14th cent.), Italian sensibile (beginning of the 14th cent.), all in a similar range of senses. With use as noun compare post-classical Latin sensibile (neuter) the sentient part of a human being (4th cent.), sensibilia (neuter plural) things that are perceptible by the senses, material things (4th or 5th cent.). Compare sensibility n., sensitive adj. (which shows considerable semantic overlap), and (with use as adverb) sensibly adv.With later specific senses in branch A. II., compare similar uses of Middle French, French sensible in senses ‘susceptible to specific ideas’ (1559), ‘(of a person) that reacts strongly to physical stimuli’ (c1590), ‘easily affected by emotions’ (1643). With β. forms compare -able suffix, and also Anglo-Norman sensable.
A. adj.
I. That can be perceived by the mind or intellect, or by the senses.
1. Esp. of speech or writing: easily understood; making a strong impression on the mind; striking, effective. Cf. sense A. 15b. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > intelligibility > [adjective]
understandinga1382
sensiblea1393
knowablea1425
perceivablec1443
takablec1449
understandablec1475
intendible1489
intentiblea1492
intelligible1509
facile1531
level1559
discernable1561
receptible1574
intendable?1577
excogitable1592
penetrable1594
comprehensible1598
scrutablec1604
distinguishable1611
discernible1616
perviousa1631
fathomable1633
cognoscible1648
colligible1650
determinable1658
intelligent1676
cognizable1681
apprehensive1692
susceptible1694
tangible1709
apprehensible1715
pronounced1728
comprehendible1814
graspable1818
prehensiblea1832
prononcé1838
possible1864
receivable1865
unsmothered1891
readable1908
discriminable1946
the mind > emotion > aspects of emotion > effect produced on emotions > [adjective] > strong or deep
sensiblea1393
solemnc1400
forcible1573
powerful1588
pressive1623
effectual1662
knock-down1690
impressive1775
imposing1783
effective1790
telling1819
home-coming1848
compelling1901
awesome1916
impactive1934
dynamite1942
fuck-off1962
society > leisure > the arts > literature > style of language or writing > vigour or force > [adjective]
sensiblea1393
eloquent1393
rhetoricc1450
mightya1500
pithy1529
grave1541
pithful1548
weighty1560
sappy1563
emphatical1567
fasta1568
thwacking1567
forceful1571
enforceable1589
energetical1596
eloquious1599
sinewy1600
emphatic1602
sinewed1604
strong1604
tonitruous1606
nervose1645
nervous1663
energetic1674
energic1683
strong1685
cogent1718
lapidary1724
forcible1726
authoritative1749
terse1777
telling1819
vigorous1821
sturdy1822
tonitruant1861
meaty1874
vertebrate1882
energized1887
jawy1898
heavy1970
a1393 J. Gower Confessio Amantis (Fairf.) vii. l. 127 (MED) The feith of holi cherche..in som cas upon believe Stant more than thei conne prieve Be weie of Argument sensible.
?a1425 tr. Guy de Chauliac Grande Chirurgie (Hunterian) f. 42 (MED) Þe anothomie of hem [sc. parts of the head] schal ben treted in eiȝte chapiters after þe diuisioun of þe gretter partikels of amannes bodie, be cause þat sucche sensibel diuisioun is moste open.
c1475 Court of Sapience (Trin. Cambr.) (1927) l. 260 (MED) Ryght sensyble and preygnaunt for your part Ys that straunge argument.
1532 L. Cox Art or Crafte Rhetoryke Ep. Ded. sig. A.iiv To be techers of goddes worde in suche maner as may be moost sensible & accepte to theyr audience.
a1568 R. Ascham Scholemaster (1570) ii. f. 37v He..therefore imployed thereunto a fitte, sensible, and caulme kinde of speaking and writing.
1644 J. Lightfoot Harmony Foure Evangelists: 1st Pt. x. 198 That a full and cleere, yea, even a sensible demonstration of the Trinity might bee made at this beginning of the Gospel.
1684 R. Waller tr. Ess. Nat. Exper. Acad. del Cimento Pref. sig. bv Wherefore he judges it an Undertaking worthy of his great Mind to confront with the most Acurate, and sensible Experiments, the force of their Assertions.
1715 J. T. Desaguliers tr. N. Gauger Fires Improv'd 22 If such a Tube be bent, the Experiment will be much more sensible.
1744 J. Harris Three Treat. ii. vi. 97 The Ideas therefore,of Poetry must needs make the most sensible Impression, when the Affections, peculiar to them, are already excited by the Music.
1795 W. Winterbotham Hist. View Chinese Empire vii. 331 Declaring, in a sensible and striking manner, the infinite distance which is between the Supreme Being and man.
1825 Oxberry's Dramatic Biogr. I. 112 Silence being at length procured, Mr. Kemble proceeded to defend himself in a sensible address.
2.
a. Perceptible by or through the senses.In Philosophy often opposed to intelligible (intelligible adj. 2).
(a) Without construction.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > physical sensibility > ability to be perceived by senses > [adjective]
sensiblea1398
feelablec1443
perceivablec1475
sensual1529
passible1558
perceptible1567
sensitive1577
distinguishable1611
discernable1627
discernible1633
perceptive1740
appreciable?1775
a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add. 27944) (1975) I. iii. xiii. 102 He knowiþ sensibil þinges [L. res materiales] present and absent by here owne material schappis.
a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add. 27944) (1975) II. xviii. cv. 1255 Þough he [sc. a moth] be a sensible beste [L. sensibile animal], ȝit he hydeþ himself wiþinne þe cloþ þat vnneþe he is yseye.
?c1400 (c1380) G. Chaucer tr. Boethius De Consol. Philos. (BL Add. 10340) (1868) v. pr. iv. l. 4798 For it [sc. intelligence] knoweþ þe vniuersite of resoun and þe figure of þe ymaginacioun and þe sensible material [L. materiale sensibile] conseiued.
R. Misyn tr. R. Rolle Fire of Love 2 When I felt fyrst my hert wax warme, and treuly, not ymagynyngly, bot als it wer with sensibyll fyer, byrned.
a1535 T. More Treat. Passion in Wks. (1557) 1344/1 The sanctifying of the misticall sacrifice, and the translacion or chaunging of it from thynges sensible to thynges intelligible.
1557 J. Gwynneth Playne Demonstr. xxvii. f. 49v We may vnderstande his immortall body to be sensible, that is to say, visible, palpable.
1621 D. Widdowes tr. W. A. Scribonius Nat. Philos. 6 Fixed are the starres of the firmament, whose motion is not, sensible.
1690 J. Locke Ess. Humane Understanding iii. ii. 187 The use then of Words, is to be sensible Marks of Ideas.
1732 J. Arbuthnot Pract. Rules of Diet i. 255 Taste and other sensible Qualities.
1794 R. Kirwan Elements Mineral. (ed. 2) I. 2 The other sensible appearances of earths.
a1807 W. Wordsworth Prelude (1959) xiii. 486 In a world of life they live, By sensible impressions not enthrall'd.
1865 G. Grote Plato I. i. 10 Some primordial and fundamental nature, by and out of which the sensible universe was built up and produced.
1948 H. J. Paton Categorical Imperative 239 This understanding..is closely bound up with sense and is directed to the knowing of sensible objects.
1985 O. Sacks Man who mistook Wife vii. 68 We have five senses in which we glory and which we recognise and celebrate, senses that constitute the sensible world for us.
2007 R. Pasnau in H. Lagerlund et al. Representation & Objects Thought Medieval Philos. iii. 41 The concept of curved..can be abstracted..from even a generalized conception of sensible matter.
(b) With to.In later use chiefly with reference to touch.
ΚΠ
1542 T. Elyot Bibliotheca at Dyastole A lyftyng or rysyng vp of the harte,..sensible to feele by the poulses.
1567 T. Gale tr. Galen De Tumoribus preter Naturam viii, in Certaine Wks. 368 The motion of the artery, is sensible to vs without pcine [sic].
a1616 W. Shakespeare Macbeth (1623) ii. i. 36 Art thou not fatall Vision, sensible To feeling, as to sight? or art thou but A Dagger of the Minde. View more context for this quotation
1660 J. Tombes Romanism Discussed viii. 216 Christian Doctrine doth not consist in the History of the things sensible to the eye.
1733 J. Arbuthnot Ess. Effects Air Human Bodies i. 1 Air is sensible to the Touch by its Motion, and by its Resistance to Bodies moved in it.
1799 Philos. Mag. 3 380 The ear..becomes more sensible to the vibrations of sound.
a1854 H. Reed Lect. Eng. Lit. (1878) i. 36 All of earth and sky that..is sensible to us.
1875 A. J. Ellis tr. H. L. F. von Helmholtz On Sensations of Tone ii. 51 To each such single simple vibration corresponds a simple tone, sensible to the ear.
1906 W. M. Binns First Cent. Eng. Porcelain 84 The gilding is..thickly laid on and sensible to the touch.
1960 ‘A. Burgess’ Doctor is Sick xxiii. 188 Edwin..examined the stranger's bald scalp with care. Something was growing there, too: a kind of fluff sensible to the touch.
2003 E. D. Harvey Sensible Flesh i. 20 A woven web of texture sensible to the touch.
b. Of or relating to the senses or sensation.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > physical sensibility > [adjective] > of or relating to physical sensation
animala1400
sensible?a1425
sensualc1429
sensitive1502
sensate1677
sensatory1720
sensorial1742
aesthetic1798
sensational1807
sensatorial1847
perceptual1878
psychosensory1881
aesthesic1898
?a1425 tr. Catherine of Siena Orcherd of Syon (Harl.) (1966) 354 Þe sencible feelyng sleepiþ in a parfiȝt soule, but it dieþ not.
1533 tr. Erasmus Enchiridion Militis Christiani v. sig. D.vv Those thynges whiche be perceyued with reason onely, and not of the sensible powers.
1603 W. Shakespeare Hamlet i. i. 55 I might not this beleeue, without the sensible and true auouch of my owne eyes.
1653 N. Homes Αποκαλυψις Αναστασεως iii. iv. 399 Our reason shall not be covered, nor cumbred with errour, and mistakes, and sensible desires.
1716 D. Ryder Diary 7 Aug. (1939) (modernized text) 291 To win them from sensible enjoyments and make them grow very little fond of life.
1793 T. Beddoes Observ. Nature Demonstrative Evid. 43 It is impossible to convince such an objector, by direct sensible testimony.
1819 J. Macphail Gardener's Remembrancer (ed. 2) i. 1 It seems that vegetables have no sensible feeling or instinct to induce them to use means to preserve life.
1878 W. H. Hill Ethics v. 98 The sensible appetite, within certain limits, is obedient to reason.
1980 J. A. Massey tr. L. Feuerbach Thoughts on Death & Immortality 51 The character of experience exists clearly in sensible desire and enjoyment.
2015 C. S. Sevier Aquinas on Beauty iii. 47 More people seek sensible pleasures than intellectual ones.
3. Perceptible by the mind or intellect; accessible to or impacting on the emotions. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > aspects of emotion > emotional perception > [adjective] > perceptible emotionally
sensiblec1485
apprehensiblea1631
c1485 ( G. Hay Bk. Gouernaunce of Princis (1993) xviii. 85 The wit of the man is sa noble..yat all thing yat god and nature has maid is till him sensible and sauourable be way of resoun.
1517 W. Atkinson tr. Full Deuoute & Gostely Treatyse Imytacyon Cryste iv. xiiii. sig. C.iii The greate desyre of thys holy sacrament & sensible loue of hert myght nat conteyne ne witholde them from wepynge.
1597 T. Morley Plaine & Easie Introd. Musicke 100 This waie is so well, as I perceiue no sensible fault in it.
1623 in L. B. Taylor Aberdeen Council Lett. (1942) I. 212 So cleir sensibill and inevitabill evilles and inconveniences.
1679 R. Fleming One Necessary Thing to be Sought ii. 19 What a present and sensible reliefe is here in Love, Humility, Meekness, Patience and Hope.
1701 Acct. Life in T. Stanley Hist. Philos. (ed. 3) Introd. sig. c2 He affirms that it bears sensible Marks of its Newness.
1782 J. Brown Compend. View Nat. & Revealed Relig. v. v. 498 Sensible assurance of God's love.
1835 C. Hodge Comm. Epist. Rom. vii. 274 Conversion is a great change; sensible to him that experiences it, and visible to others.
1875 H. E. Manning Internal Mission of Holy Ghost iv. 104 But the love of God does not mean..the sensible love which we feel towards human friends.
1908 J. McQuirk Short Disc. All Sundays in Year lx. 325 Sorrow which seems more intense, because sensible, than that which is essential to Contrition.
1997 T. M. Lennon & P. J. Olscamp tr. N. Malebranche Search after Truth v. i. 337 Men are capable of a certain sensible love or hatred only because they are capable of a spiritual love or hatred.
4. Acutely felt; markedly painful or pleasurable. Often with to. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > health and disease > ill health > pain > [adjective] > causing pain
sorec897
smartc1300
throlya1375
snella1400
dolorousc1400
painfulc1400
sensible1502
afflictive1576
doloriferous1599
exasperated1611
dolorific1634
painable1649
algetic1879
algesic1880
paining1891
the mind > emotion > suffering > mental anguish or torment > [adjective] > severe
heavya1000
tartc1000
unridec1175
unsoftc1275
uglya1300
smartc1300
sternc1300
cruelc1384
sharpc1386
shrewda1387
snella1400
painousa1450
painlyc1460
sensible1502
terrible1509
heinous?1541
severe1747
1502 tr. Ordynarye of Crysten Men (de Worde) v. iii. sig. oov The fourth is vnto ye regarde of lytell chyldren ye whiche ben deed in orygynall synne, The whiche shall be in ye fyre of hell wtout suffrynge payne sensyble [Fr. peine sensible].
1594 W. Shakespeare Lucrece sig. M1 My woe too sencible thy passion maketh More feeling painfull.
1640 tr. G. S. du Verdier Love & Armes Greeke Princes iii. ix. 34 The fall of this young Prince..was so sensible to the Emperour, that had he not feared the anger of Brustafard..the Jousts had been at an end.
1655 E. Terry Voy. E.-India 122 Scorpions..whose stinging is most sensible, and deadly.
1711 in Hist. MSS Comm.: 10th Rep.: App. Pt. V: MSS Marquis of Ormonde &c. (1885) 184 in Parl. Papers 1884–5 (C. 4576–I) XLII. 1 His..death proved very sensible to the languishing King.
1769 in J. Boswell Ess. in Favour of Brave Corsicans xx. 129 The general zeal..in favour of the brave Corsicans, gives a very sensible joy to every true friend of liberty.
1819 W. Scott Ivanhoe I. ix. 163 The time and place prevented his receiving..more sensible marks of his master's resentment.
1893 R. L. Stevenson Let. 30 Jan. in Vailima Lett. (1895) 246 All novels are a heavy burthen while they are doing, and a sensible disappointment when they are done.
1918 tr. J. M. Ory Origin of Order of Our Lady of Charity 595 She made great strides in overcoming a too sensible feeling that superiors had their preferences for others to her detriment.
5.
a. Easy to perceive, evident, obvious. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > manifestation > manifestness > [adjective]
sutelc897
openeOE
ebera975
graithc1325
broadc1374
plainc1375
clearc1380
grossc1380
manifest1385
notoire1409
patent1508
sensible?1531
discovered1537
plain as a pikestaff (also packstaff, pad-staff)1542
palpable1545
demonstrative1552
plain as the nose on (in) one's face1560
illustrate1562
appearing1566
notorious1581
obvious1583
unshadowed1593
transparent1597
liquid1610
visible1614
pellucid1644
illustrious1654
apertive1661
conspectable1727
suggestive1806
the mind > mental capacity > belief > uncertainty, doubt, hesitation > absence of doubt, confidence > assured fact, certainty > evident certainty > [adjective]
witterc1175
apert1340
clearc1380
plainc1395
apparentc1400
demonstrablea1425
demonstrate1509
sensible?1531
explicit1623
apodicticala1638
demonstrated1646
apodictic1652
flat1665
decided1757
distinct1828
?1531 R. Barnes Supplic. Kinge Henrye VIII fol. xxjv All the world may see what you be, these thynges be sensyble ynough.
a1586 Sir P. Sidney Arcadia (1590) iii. xviii. sig. Ss7 Their smart being more sensible to others eyes, then to their owne feeling.
1604 T. Wright Passions of Minde (new ed.) v. 166 In some musick there is to be noted a manifest loose effeminatenesse: and the experience is so sensible, that it were superfluous to proceed any farther in proofe.
1690 J. Locke Ess. Humane Understanding iii. v. 205 These are too sensible proofs to be doubted.
1736 Bp. J. Butler Analogy of Relig. i. v. 89 Under the more immediate, or, if such an Expression may be used, the more Sensible Government of God.
1794 S. Williams Nat. & Civil Hist. Vermont iv. 57 It..is most of all sensible and apparent in a new country.
1816 P. Cleaveland Elem. Treat. Mineral. & Geol. 539 It yields a white smoke and a very sensible odor of garlic.
1853 J. Phillips Rivers, Mountains, & Sea-coast Yorks. v. 150 The warming influence of the sea air begins to be very sensible in October.
1912 Eng. Hist. Rev. 27 76 Morville..showed sensible pleasure, saying that nothing could be more agreeable to France than to see Great Britain and Prussia more closely united.
b. Of an immaterial thing, as a quantity, magnitude, distance, etc.: large enough to be perceived or to be worth considering; appreciable, substantial, considerable.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > quantity > greatness of quantity, amount, or degree > [adjective] > considerable in amount or degree
goodeOE
fairOE
goodlyc1275
largea1375
no littlea1413
substantial1413
unleast?1440
prettya1475
reasonablea1500
substantious1545
substantive1575
sensible1581
pretty and ——1596
goody1597
greatish1611
considerable1651
sonsy1721
respectable1736
smart1750
quite a little ——1763
gey1796
smartish1799
canny1805
serious1810
right smart1825
dunnamuch1831
snug1833
tidy1839
bonnyish1855
largish1872
a nice little ——1891
significant1898
healthy1901
beaucoup1917
the mind > attention and judgement > importance > [adjective] > worthy of notice > of considering
estimable1576
sensible1581
esteemable1612
considerablea1631
some1844
thoughtworthy1846
1581 W. Lambarde Eirenarcha ii. xx. 502 If our Gaoles in Englande were more often swepte & emptied, I doubt not, but that wee also shoulde finde a sensible profite to arise by it.
1646 Sir T. Browne Pseudodoxia Epidemica iv. vii. 196 We could discover no sensible difference in weight. View more context for this quotation
1677 J. Mitchel Disc. of Glory iii. 65 The Earth..is but as a point, i. e. of no considerable bigness (of no sensible quantity).
1755 B. Martin Mag. Arts & Sci. 116 A very sensible Distance Eastward.
1792 T. Jefferson Writings (1859) III. 340 You will perceive that the Indian War calls for sensible exertions.
1843 J. E. Portlock Rep. Geol. Londonderry viii. 215 Both contain a sensible amount of Strontian.
1880 C. R. Markham Peruvian Bark iii. xv. 436 [It will] effect a sensible reduction in these figures.
1917 Polit. Sci. Q. 32 336 There is no sensible difference of race among the peoples of northwestern Europe and the British Isles.
1953 S. F. Mason Main Currents Sci. Thought xvii. 162 Newton calculated..that there would be no sensible alteration in the motions of the planets through frictional resistance even after 10,000 years.
2001 Jrnl. Coastal Res. 30 102/2 These various tidal components..provide a sensible increase in water level.
II. Capable of perceiving or responding to a stimulus; having senses.
6. Designating the faculty of sensation, as †sensible capacity, sensible faculty, sensible virtue. Cf. sensitive adj. 1a. Now historical and rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > physical sensibility > [noun] > faculty of sensation
sensible virtuea1398
sensualityc1405
sensitivec1487
sense1553
sensible capacity1593
sentient1603
sensibility1610
a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add. 27944) (1975) I. iii. xii. 99 The vertu sensibile þat meueþ is departid aþre. On partie hatte naturalis and þe oþir vitalis and þe þridde animalis.
c1450 (?c1408) J. Lydgate Reson & Sensuallyte (1901) l. 716 With [read Whiche] vertu namyd ys sensible, And is, as y reherse kan, Yove to beste and eke to man.
1593 R. Hooker Of Lawes Eccl. Politie i. vi. 58 Beastes are in sensible capacitie as ripe euen as men themselues, perhaps more ripe.
1655 T. Moffett & C. Bennet Healths Improvem. xxxi. 290 Whilst a man sleepeth all motive and sensible faculties seem to be idle.
1747 T. Cradock Two Serm. 10 To me it is the greatest Wonder in the World, that any Man of common Sense can be so blinded, as to follow and support a Religion, that gives the Lie to every sensible Faculty about him.
1884 tr. H. Lotze Logic 337 Quantities, of whose equality or inequality we can judge with sufficient accuracy by help of our sensible faculties alone.
1981 A. A. Sachedina Islamic Messianism 214 (note) The knowledge attained by the sensible faculty is different from that attained by experience.
2015 I. Fay Health & City i. 36 Whilst sweet smells might restore a person's senses, the sensible virtue (that is, the power rooted in the brain which governed the faculties of vision, hearing, olfaction, tasting and touch) risked being ‘corupte[d] and greved by stynkynge smelles’.
7. Having the faculty of sensation or sense perception; = sensitive adj. 2.
a. Of an organ, tissue, or part of the body. Now historical and rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > the body > sense organ > [adjective]
sensiblea1400
a1400 tr. Lanfranc Sci. Cirurgie (Ashm.) (1894) 24 From þe brayn comen .vij. peire cordes. & þei ben clepid sensible senewis.
c1475 ( Surg. Treat. in MS Wellcome 564 f. 39 (MED) The lyuere is..insensible bi himsilf, but bi accidens he is sensible.
1547 A. Borde Breuiary of Helthe i. f. xlivv A tothe is a sensyble bone, the which beyng in a lyuinge mannes heed hath felynge.
1639 J. Woodall Surgeons Mate (rev. ed.) 408 The Surgeon may come somewhat neere the sensible and living parts,..eroding, clipping, and abscinding onely the corrupt flesh.
1793 J. Bell Anat. Bones, Muscles, & Joints ii. x. 404 Some [parts of the human body] are..sensible, and very prone to inflammation and disease.
1831 W. Youatt Horse xv. 287 Between the coffin-bone and the horny sole is situated the sensible sole.
1850 H. T. Cheever Whale & his Captors v. 88 Outside of the sensible skin.
1999 M. Lindemann Med. & Soc. in Early Mod. Europe iii. 83 By dividing bodily tissues into sensible and irritable parts, he [sc. Albrecht von Haller] laid the foundation for the subsequent theories of William Cullen..and Johann Blumenbach.
b. Of persons and animals and their nature or mode of existence. Now chiefly historical.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > physical sensibility > [adjective]
passiblec1384
apprehensivea1398
feelinga1400
sensible?c1400
sufferablec1400
perceptible?a1430
sensatea1500
sensive?1541
senting1572
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sentient1632
sensile1650
sensatinga1652
perceptive1652
percipient1692
perceiving1736
?c1400 (c1380) G. Chaucer tr. Boethius De Consol. Philos. (BL Add. 10340) (1868) v. pr. iv. l. 4812 A man is [a thing] ymaginable and sensible.
1547 J. Wilkinson tr. Aristotle Ethiques iiii. sig. A.vi The Solle of man hath thre powers, one is called ye lyfe vegitable : in ye whiche man is partener with trees & with plantes: The second power, is the life sensible in the whiche a man is partener with beastes, for why al beastes haue lifes sensible.
1601 P. Holland tr. Pliny Hist. World II. xxxi. xi. 423 That spunges have life, yea and a sensible life, I have prooved heretofore.
1690 J. Locke Ess. Humane Understanding i. i. 1 It is the Understanding that sets Man above the rest of sensible Beings.
1755 B. Martin Mag. Arts & Sci. 79 Can it be possible for any sensible Beings to endure that Intensity of Cold, and live?
1813 T. Busby in tr. Lucretius Nature of Things I. ii. Comm. p. xxxv Plato..taught that sensible beings are formed from sensile atoms.
1983 Traditio 39 195 In the state of innocence God subordinated sensible creatures to man.
2013 C. H. Kahn Plato & Post-Socratic Dialogue v. 172 According to the narrative of the Timaeus, the cosmos itself is an individual zōon, a sensible living thing that has come into existence and in principle might perish.
8.
a. Having the faculty of sensation to a particular (usually high) degree. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > physical sensibility > acuteness of physical senses > [adjective] > having acute sense perception
sensiblea1530
sensitive1760
a1530 W. Bonde Pylgrimage of Perfeccyon (1531) iii. f. CCv Whose blessed flesshe was moost tender, sensyble and lyuely.
1543 B. Traheron tr. J. de Vigo Most Excellent Wks. Chirurg. i. ii. f. 15v/1 After the digestyue, ye muste clense the place wythe a mundificatyue of Syrupe of Roses, cheyfelye whan the Aposteme is aboute verye sensible places.
1600 R. Surflet tr. C. Estienne & J. Liébault Maison Rustique ii. xlvi. 299 The stomacke being easie and inclined to vomit, as hauing a verie sensible orifice.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Tempest (1623) ii. i. 179 These Gentlemen, who are of such sensible and nimble Lungs, that they alwayes vse to laugh at nothing. View more context for this quotation
1679 G. Rose tr. P. Boaistuau Theatre of World ii. 318 A Faggot burning hot, applyed to the most sensible parts about him.
1739 J. Sparrow tr. H. F. Le Dran Observ. Surg. civ. 338 The Flesh at the Bottom of the Wound was very sensible.
1766 O. Goldsmith Vicar of Wakefield I. iii. 27 Physicians tell us of a disorder in which the whole body is so exquisitely sensible, that the slightest touch gives pain.
1813 J. Thomson Lect. Inflammation 45 Parts, which in the sound state have little or no sensibility, become exquisitely sensible in the inflamed.
1832 D. Brewster Lett. Nat. Magic ix. 229 The human ear is so extremely sensible as to be capable of appreciating sounds which arise from about twenty-four thousand vibrations in a second.
b. With to (formerly also †of). Liable to be quickly or acutely affected by a specified sensory stimulus; = sensitive adj. 5a. Now rare and archaic.
ΚΠ
a1616 W. Shakespeare Julius Caesar (1623) i. iii. 18 Yet his Hand, Not sensible of fire, remain'd vnscorch'd. View more context for this quotation
1691 J. Ray Wisdom of God 182 The most wise Author of Nature hath..made it [sc. the eye] more patient and less sensible of cold than our other parts.
1740 tr. Le Fèvre de Morsan Manners & Customs Romans iii. vii. 286 To rub themselves with oil, in order to render their members more supple and active, and less sensible to cold.
1774 O. Goldsmith Hist. Earth II. 169 Dogs are well known to be very sensible of different tones in music.
1822 J. M. Good Study Med. III. 203 At noon-tide..it [sc. the retina affected with day-sight] is sensible to the impressions of objects; but does not clearly discern them in the shade or towards the close of day.
1891 Pennsylvania School Jrnl. Aug. 65/1 The body is less sensible to heat and cold, and may suffer from either extreme before aware of the danger.
1914 Trained Nurse & Hosp. Rev. Apr. 212/2 Elderly persons..are more sensible to cold and to currents of air.
2012 Pakistan Law Rep. (Nexis) 28 June Aged, sick, people afflicted with psychic disturbances..are considered to be very sensible to noise.
9. Capable of or liable to emotional response. Cf. sensitive adj. 4.
a. With to, of. Susceptible to, or readily affected by, some specified emotional influence. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > aspects of emotion > emotional perception > [adjective] > emotionally conscious of something
sensible1611
sensible1614
conscious1617
innerly1824
the mind > emotion > aspects of emotion > capacity for emotion > [adjective] > susceptible to something spec.
sensible1611
countablea1616
susceptive1637
touchable1642
susceptible1646
1611 R. Bolton Disc. State True Happinesse 84 It awakes the conscience, and makes it tender and sensible of the least sinne.
1655 in W. Fraser Annandale Family Bk. (1894) II. 299 I ame to acquainte you with..the late losse of my father. I ame confident your lordship will bee very sensible of this newes, for hee truly did respect you.
a1740 J. Abernethy Serm. Var. Subj. (1748) I. vii. 155 The principles of self-love deeply rooted in our nature, makes us always sensible to our own interests.
1791 J. Boswell Life Johnson anno 1734 I. 42 Johnson had, from his early youth, been sensible to the influence of female charms.
a1832 J. T. Graves Rom. & Canon Law in Encycl. Metrop. (1845) II. 738/2 The Roman mind seems to have been always sensible to the claims of justice.
1849 T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. I. iv. 450 Work was to be done, however, which could be trusted to no man who reverenced law or was sensible of shame.
1904 E. M. R. Seymour tr. E. Dumont Great Frenchman & Little Genevese iii. 28 Mirabeau, who was extremely sensible to kindness, softened gradually.
b. Strongly affected by negative emotional influences; easily hurt or offended; = sensitive adj. 4b. Also with of. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > anger > irascibility > touchiness > [adjective]
stomaching1579
pepper-nosed1580
ticklish1581
touchy1602
sensible1613
touchousa1618
tender1641
tickly1661
indigestive1670
snuffy1678
huffy1680
snuffish1689
sorea1694
mifty1699
resentive1710
sensitive1735
uppish1778
miffish1790
miffy1810
stomachy1825
porcupinish1829
insultable1841
offensible1846
highty-tighty1847
prickly1853
fuffy1858
piquable1860
offendable1864
raw1864
ear-sore1865
uffish1871
porcupiny1890
feisty1896
ticklish-tempered1897
toey1930
1613 J. Hayward Liues III. Normans 114 Great personages are most sencible of reproach, and the least touch of honour maketh a wide and incurable wound.
1620 J. Pyper tr. H. d'Urfé Hist. Astrea i. vi. 172 I haue had so many and so great troubles for louing, that I am no more sensible on that side, hauing beene so hardened.
1759 Ld. Chesterfield Let. 27 Apr. (1932) (modernized text) V. 2350 You will say..that, if a person is born of a very sensible gloomy temper..they cannot help it.
1792 G. Morris Diary & Lett. (1889) II. 3 These [titles] should be properly placed, you know, because monarchs are very sensible on that subject.
1815 E. Quillinan Monthermer ii. 39 With wond'rous ease Some gentle ladies can their griefs appease. Monthermer on the couch of sickness laid, What could console so sensible a maid?
c. Capable of delicate or tender feeling; compassionate, tender-hearted. Cf. sensibility n. 4. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > aspects of emotion > capacity for emotion > sensitiveness or tenderness > [adjective]
softc1175
mild-hearteda1200
moll1386
tender-hearted1539
melch-hearted1552
tenderly1567
feeling1583
frail1590
tender1595
tender-minded1608
sensible1631
high-strung1653
emollid1656
tender-natured1656
sensitive1735
sentimental1749
soulful1837
weak-hearted1841
1631 E. Reynolds Three Treat. i. 75 These are considerations which unto sensible consciences must sometime or other beget much vexation.
1675 R. Burthogge Cavsa Dei 13 A person of a tender, sensible and compassionate Temper.
1734 I. Watts Reliquiæ Juveniles lvi. 238 Preserve your Conscience always soft and sensible.
1760 L. Sterne Serm. III. 405 St. Peter certainly was of a warm and sensible nature.
1895 I. Maclaren Beside Bonnie Brier Bush iii. 90 The sunset..was the finest sight a Drumtochty man was ever likely to see, and a means of grace to every sensible heart in the glen.
1947 W. H. Auden in Amer. Scholar Autumn 406 Deserving nothing, the sensible soul Will rejoice at the sudden mansion Of any joy.
2008 D. Kilic Domest. & Public Spectacles iii. 54 Helen Maria Williams and Charlotte Smith feminized politics by emphasizing the sensible heart and emotions instead of the mind and reason.
10. In extended use.
a. Of plants or plant parts: able to respond to touch or other stimulus with movement. Frequently with to. Cf. sensitive adj. 3a. Now historical and rare. The movements were previously taken as evidence of the same capacity for sensation as is found in animals.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > by nutrition or respiration > [adjective] > sensitive to stimuli
sensible1623
sensitive1633
heliotropian1640
meteoric1789
phototonic1875
tonotactic1909
1623 R. Jobson Golden Trade 136 If you toucht or stird a little sprigge, the whole tree should close his leaues after a most sensible manner. Whereof taking especiall notice, wee did allow it to be the sensible tree, of which auncient authours haue written.
1648 J. Bobart Eng. Catal. in Catalogus Plantarum Horti Medici Oxoniensis Sensible plant, Herba mimosa.
1661 O. Felltham Resolves (rev. ed.) 231 Like the sensible plant, when the hand of flesh does touch it, she shrinks in all her leaves.
1725 H. Sloane Voy. Islands II. 58 Sensible Grass. It is so very sensible that..I have on horseback wrote my name with a rod in a spot of it which continued visible for some time.
1742 E. Milward in Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 42 4 The Antidote is, the Root of the Sensible Weed, as it is commonly called, or Herba Sensitiva.
1769 E. Bancroft Ess. Nat. Hist. Guiana 225 From the Sensible Plant to the scarce vegetable Moss, all are exquisitely adapted.
1807 J. E. Smith Introd. Physiol. & Systematical Bot. xvi. 208 Succulent leaves..have been observed to be peculiarly sensible to light.
1832 C. Don Gen. Hist. Dichlamydeous Plants II. 398/1 Desmanthus... Sect. I. Neptunia... Prostrate, usually rooting, aquatic herbs, furnished with bipinnate leaves, which are sensible to the touch, as those of the sensitive plants.
1915 Proc. Royal Soc. Med. 8 38 The plant remained apparently absolutely unaffected, but on giving it a gentle stroke it was no longer sensible to the stimulus.
1932 Morning Sun (Iowa) News-Herald 21 Apr. Mimosa pudica; sensitive plant or ‘sensible’ plant; grown for curious sensitive foliage.
2014 B. Larson in B. V. Lightman & B. Zon Evol. & Victorian Culture v. 130 The mimosa as either sensible or merely mechanistic was widely debated during this period and central to larger speculations regarding movement in plants.
b. Of a measuring instrument, substance, etc.: readily affected by physical stimuli or external forces; responsive to or recording slight changes of condition. Also with of or to.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > freedom from error, correctness > exactness, accuracy, precision > [adjective] > of tools, materials, etc.: accurate
truec1392
just?1556
precise1561
finea1566
delicate1581
nicea1628
exact1665
sensible1678
sensitive1820
precision1875
pin-sharp1933
1678 J. Locke Let. 6 Aug. in R. Boyle Corr. (2001) V. 111 A friend of his hath found out a very sensible hygrometer.
1684 R. Waller tr. Ess. Nat. Exper. Acad. del Cimento 5 The Third [thermometer]..is more sensible, and swifter near four times.
1761 Gentleman's Mag. June 258/1 What remained in the crucible was a calcined earth, some particles of which appeared sensible to the magnet.
1780 Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 70 17 I insulated a brass plate upon a glass stand, and connected a very sensible electrometer with it.
1819 J. G. Children Ess. Chem. Anal. 372 This balance is sensible to the 1/100dth part of a grain when loaded with 1000 grains in each pan.
1821 W. T. Brande Man. Chem. (ed. 2) I. i. 144 Nitrate of mercury is a prevaricating test, but very sensible to a variety of substances that may exist in mineral waters.
1834 M. Somerville On Connexion Physical Sci. xxxi. 330 This instrument [sc. the galvanometer] is rendered much more sensible by neutralizing the effects of the earth's magnetism on the needle.
1907 Washington Post 16 Apr. 1/2 (heading) Seismograph at weather bureau sensible to Sunday's earth tremors.
1999 D. A. Golombek in M. R. Kidger et al. Internet Resources Professional Astron. vii. 252 The MAMA [= Multi-Anode Microchannel Array] detectors are photon-counting detectors sensible to UV radiation.
2010 F. Difato et al. xvi. 6 in A. Diaspro Nanoscopy & Multidimensional Optical Fluorescence Microsc. The PFM [= Photonic Force Microscope] is sensible to any kind of environmental noise: thermal, acoustic, or convective.
III. Concerned with the physical senses.
11. Chiefly in religious contexts: sensual, fleshly. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > physical sensibility > sensuous pleasure > sensuality > [adjective]
sensible?a1425
voluptuousc1440
sensual1502
epicurish1548
epicurious1553
epicureala1555
epicurean1583
volupt1585
flesh-pleasing1647
sensuistic1839
sensuous1858
apolaustic1871
?a1425 tr. Catherine of Siena Orcherd of Syon (Harl.) (1966) 162 (MED) Sche ouercomeþ alle her owne propre sencible passiouns vertuously.
a1500 (?a1425) tr. Secreta Secret. (Lamb.) 96 (MED) He ressayues a stryngthe of vndirstandynge þat ys renunciatyf of ffygures and semblance & of temptacions sensibles [L. temptationum sensibilium].
1653 K. Digby tr. Albertus Magnus Treat. adhering to God vi. 23 You must necessarily devest your heart of all sensible love [L. amore sensibili], not only of all persons whatsoever, but of all creatures whatsoever.
1724 W. Reading 23 Serm. vi. 96 He [sc. the Devil] studies to bring mankind into the same circumstances with himself... by baiting his hooks with sensible temptations.
IV. Aware, conscious.
12.
a. Conscious, cognizant, aware of something. Often coloured by sense A. 13. Also (now rarely) with to, or with clause (esp. that-clause) as complement. Now somewhat archaic.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > perception or cognition > [adjective] > that perceives, aware > of something
sensible?c1425
conscientious1637
conusant1651
conscious1661
sentient1814
cognizant1820
cognoscent1830
?c1425 (c1412) T. Hoccleve De Regimine Principum (Royal 17 D.vi) (1860) 57 Art thou ought, sone myne, sensible In whiche cas that thou oughtest the forbere, And in whiche not?
1574 E. Hellowes tr. A. de Guevara Familiar Epist. 302 Neither be sensible of the mischief, nor profit vs of the time.
1625 F. Bacon Ess. (new ed.) xxix. 177 Be not too sensible, or too remembring, of thy Place, in Conuersation.
1667 S. Pepys Diary 14 Feb. (1974) VIII. 62 Which shows how little we are sensible of the weight of the business upon us.
1699 R. Bentley Diss. Epist. Phalaris (new ed.) 309 I am sensible how long I have detain'd the Reader upon this Subject.
1721 Lady M. W. Montagu Let. Mar. (1966) II. 4 I would have you then..try to make the wretch sensible of the Truth of what I advance.
1742 R. Challoner Mem. Missionary Priests II. 2 The Catholics were made sensible, that however the Persecution might in some measure be abated, it was not to cease.
1762 A. Dickson Treat. Agric. iv. iii. 407 If these salts and oils actually fly off from it in such quantities, as to make us sensible of them by smell.
1806 R. Cumberland Mem. 428 I was not sensible to the extent of my danger.
1875 B. Jowett in tr. Plato Dialogues (ed. 2) V. 68 He is sensible that moderation is better than total abstinence.
1957 P. White Voss x. 312 There were occasions, this fever-gutted man suspected, when his leader was not sensible of their common doom.
1981 Times 22 Aug. 17/2 Some brokers..still see a bleak divided outlook... But others, sensible to business recovery and slackening inflation, are now more sanguine.
2009 J. Rubino & C. Rubino-Broadway Lady Vernon & Her Daughters xii. 58 She was sensible of the indelicacy of raising the subject so soon after her husband's funeral.
b. Mindful or considerate of a person. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > attention and judgement > attention > [adjective] > careful of
mindyOE
mindc1300
mindfula1382
mindly1435
thoughtfulc1450
respective1560
suspectful1570
regardfula1586
respectful1585
considerate1592
remembering1625
sensible1626
1626 Orig. Jrnls. House of Lords 11 May (Parl. Archives HL/PO/JO/1/12) 166 I humbly beseech your lopps [= lordshipps] to bee sensible of mee in this point, what dishonor I haue susteined.
1646 H. Lawrence Of Communion & Warre with Angels Ep. Ded. sig. *2v As we usually are more sensible of our enemyes then our friends.
1891 G. Meredith One of our Conquerors II. xi. 270 He pitied, and strove to be sensible of her.
13. Emotionally conscious; having a pleasurable, painful, grateful, or resentful awareness of a fact, condition, action, etc. In later use chiefly: spec. gratefully conscious of kindness, a favour, etc. Also (now rarely) with to, or with clause as complement. Formerly also with for and without construction. Now somewhat archaic.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > aspects of emotion > emotional perception > [adjective] > emotionally conscious of something
sensible1611
sensible1614
conscious1617
innerly1824
1614 E. Grimeston tr. P. Matthieu Hist. Lewis XI x. 68 This sickenesse had toucht his heart, and made him more sencible [Fr. sensible] of the miseries and calamities of his subiects.
1634 W. Tirwhyt tr. J. L. G. de Balzac Lett. 26 They stood amazed to see a servant..Who was as sensible of the least evils of his country as of his proper sorrows.
1656 J. Bramhall Replic. to Bishop of Chalcedon 11 God seemeth to be more sensible of the injuries done unto his church and to his servants, then of the dishonor done unto himself.
a1680 S. Butler Genuine Remains (1759) II. 74 His Pleasures require a larger Proportion of Excess and Variety, to render him sensible of them.
1711 J. Addison Spectator No. 166. ¶8 He found that he was so very sensible of his Fault, and so sincerely repented of it.
a1715 G. Hickes Let. to Hearne (MS. Rawl. Lett. f. 15) 75 I am as sensible & sorry for the great Loss of Mr. Urry, as any Friend he hath left behind him.
1748 S. Richardson Clarissa III. xii. 87 I kiss'd her, and she made me a courtesy for my condescension; and blush'd, and seem'd sensible all over.
1775 Earl of Carlisle in J. H. Jesse G. Selwyn & his Contemp. (1844) III. 108 Lady Carlisle desires to be remembered to you; she is, indeed, very sensible of your goodness to us all.
1823 W. Scott Quentin Durward III. xiii. 307 He was sensible of the indignity of serving with his noblest peers under the banners of his own vassal.
1846 W. S. Landor Imaginary Conversat. in Wks. II. 122/2 When he has given them the faculties, they become so sensible and grateful, they do whatever he orders.
1856 T. Carlyle Let. to J. Knight 19 Apr. in Catal. Hist. Docs. & Autograph Lett. (1862) II. 18 Surely I am very sensible to the kindness of the President and Council in this matter.
1895 N. Amer. Rev. Aug. 149 They are always sensible to kindness and sympathy.
1944 G. Heyer Friday's Child i. 5 Indeed, I am deeply sensible of the honour you have done me, but—.
1992 S. Fry Paperweight (1993) 52 I have no doubt that we are all deeply sensible of the profound compliment paid us.
14. Aware of and responsive to one's surroundings; fully conscious; not unconscious or delirious. Cf. insensible adj. 3b. Now somewhat archaic.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > physical sensibility > [adjective] > conscious
alive1592
sensible1678
conscious1728
1678 W. Simpson Short Ess. Hist. Cure Fevers 9 The Fever and its attendants had made their exit, she cheerful, very sensible, her stupor being gone.
1732 T. Lediard tr. J. Terrasson Life Sethos II. ix. 283 The governor was not yet sensible.
1785 E. K. Mathews Constance IV. vi. 50 She was sensible, and after having taken her medicine, slept again till noon.
1835 Comic Almanack 2 Speak softly, Sir; my master's turning blue. He's not been sensible since last November.
1891 ‘J. S. Winter’ Lumley xiii. 96 He's asking for you and is quiet and sensible.
1907 A. Lambert in W. Osler & T. McCrae Mod. Med. I. ix. 185 When the patient awakens from the critical sleep he is sensible, the hallucinations have gone, and his orientation is usually complete.
1960 R. F. C. Hull tr. C. G. Jung Coll. Wks. III. ii. 172 Many patients often become quite sensible again for a time, and develop mental powers which one believed they had long since lost.
1994 N. Demand tr. Hippocrates in Birth, Death, & Motherhood in Classical Greece iii. 50 She had rambling speech, then was sensible again; a slight fever was present.
V. Having, showing, or characterized by good sense.
15.
a. Of a person or (occasionally) an animal: having or showing good sense and sound judgement; judicious, reasonable, practical, prudent.In early use with connotation of intelligence and wisdom, but in later use with more restricted connotation of pragmatism and common sense. Regarded by Johnson (1755) as used ‘in low conversation’, perhaps due to this change in connotation.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > understanding > reason, faculty of reasoning > [adjective] > not excessive
skillwisea1340
reasonablec1400
sensible?a1439
rational1598
the mind > mental capacity > understanding > reason, faculty of reasoning > common sense > [adjective]
wittyc1380
perceivedc1425
sensible?a1439
sober-minded1534
staida1555
sonsy1568
mother-witted1593
unfoolish1603
capable1609
sober1619
hard-headed1779
commonsensical1792
sensical1795
sober-minded1811
common-sensible1813
savvy1826
common sensed1834
level1869
level-headed1879
square-headed1896
a1439 J. Lydgate Fall of Princes (Bodl. 263) i. l. 6094 Yiff your resouns and wittis be sensible, Thyng seyn at eye is nat incredible. [No corresponding passage in the French original.]
c1460 (?c1400) Tale of Beryn l. 2621 Wherfor wee must, with al our wit sensibill, Such answers vs purvey, þat þey been insolibil.
?a1475 Ludus Coventriae (1922) 232 (MED) As A primat most preudent, I present here sensyble buschopys of þe lawe with al þe cyrcumstawns.
1584 R. Scot Discouerie Witchcraft iii. viii. 51 If they were sensible, they would saie to the diuell; Whie should I hearken to you?
1598 W. Phillip tr. J. H. van Linschoten Disc. Voy. E. & W. Indies i. xlvi. 85/2 In the Island of Seylon there are also great numbers [of Elephants], which are esteemed the best and sensiblest of all the worlde.
a1626 F. Bacon Elements Common Lawes (1630) Pref. sig. B3v And that Ciuilians, States-men, Schollers, and other sensible men might not haue beene barred from them.
1667 L. Muggleton Looking-Glass for George Fox xxiii. 56 They were wise, sensible, sober, learned men.
1711 J. Addison Spectator No. 130. ¶3 Sir Roger..knew several sensible People who believ'd these Gypsies now and then foretold very strange things.
1768 P. Francis Let. 26 Apr. in J. Parkes Mem. Sir P. Francis (1867) I. 210 The woman..is honest and intelligent, or in the cant word, sensible.
1782 W. Cowper Conversation in Poems 222 A moral, sensible and well-bred man Will not affront me, and no other can.
1849 T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. II. vi. 97 He was too sensible a man not to know that he might at some future time be called to a serious account by a parliament.
1885 O. W. Holmes Mortal Antipathy (1886) iv. 65 No sensible person in Arrowhead village really believed in the evil eye.
1920 Amer. Woman Aug. 11/3 But you don't know the real me; I am not sensible; I am frivolous, extravagant.
1966 N. Coward Diary 13 Mar. (2000) 626 He was uneffusive, authoritative and gloriously sensible.
2012 Independent 11 Jan. 11/3 Any really major infrastructure project is going to run smack up against things no sensible person would want to destroy.
b. Of an action, object, etc.: characterized by, exhibiting, or proceeding from good sense and sound judgement.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > behaviour > good behaviour > restrained or moderate behaviour > [adjective] > exhibiting good sense
sensiblec1598
the mind > mental capacity > understanding > reason, faculty of reasoning > common sense > [adjective] > characterized by sense
sensiblec1598
philosophical1638
salted1647
philosophic1700
common sense1797
no-nonsense1853
realistic1869
grounded1976
c1598 King James VI & I Basilicon Doron (1944) I. iii. 180/1 Lett the greatest pairt of youre eloquence consiste in a naturall, cleir & sensibill forme of the deliuerie of youre mynde.
1662 H. More Antidote against Atheism (ed. 3) iii. xiii. 126 in Coll. Philos. Writings (ed. 2) The manner of this Genius his sensible Converse.
a1699 W. Temple Ess. Health & Long Life in Wks. (1720) I. 277 He had been a Soldier in the Cales Voyage..of which He gave me a sensible Account.
1729 T. Woolston 6th Disc. Miracles Saviour 29 How to make an intelligible, consistent, and sensible Story of it.
1778 F. Burney Let. Sept. in Early Jrnls. & Lett. (1994) III. 155 She has a sensible & penetrating Countenance.
1801 Farmer's Mag. Aug. 362 A very sensible paper, on the use of lime.
1849 T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. I. ii. 221 (note) The most sensible thing said in the House of Commons, on this subject, came from Sir William Coventry.
1910 Times 4 May 11/6 A correspondent yesterday made the simple and sensible suggestion that we should call them ‘airmen’.
1963 J. R. Leggett Services Estate Agent ix. 61 As regards store stock, sale by auction is the only sensible method.
2003 Art Q. Autumn 42/1 It would seem sensible to take what he says with a pinch of salt.
c. Of an object, esp. an item of clothing or footwear: practical rather than attractive or fashionable; functional, serviceable.In quot. 1737 in the sense ‘in accordance with good sense and taste; appropriate, suitable’.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > advantage > usefulness > [adjective] > merely > as opposed to fashionable or attractive
sensible1737
utilitarian1847
1737 Ld. Chesterfield in Common Sense 26 Feb. 24 Dress to be sensible, must be properly adapted to the Person.
1855 E. C. Gaskell North & South I. xii. 146 Margaret was busy embroidering a small piece of cambric... Mrs. Thornton..liked Mrs. Hale's double knitting far better; that was sensible of its kind.
1888 R. Kipling Under Deodars 8 Nice, large, sensible shoes for all couples to stumble over as they go into the verandah!
1944 W. H. Auden For Time Being ii. 36 The river on this side of which initiative and honesty stroll arm in arm wearing sensible clothes.
1959 Observer 22 Mar. 1/1 Chintz curtains and no-nonsense bundles of flowers in sensible pots.
2005 J. Weiner Goodnight Nobody xxiv. 201 She hurried down the hall after us,..sensible shoes squeaking over the linoleum.
B. n.
1. Chiefly with the: that which can be perceived by the senses. Also as a count noun (chiefly in plural): something which can be perceived by the senses. Cf. sensibile n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > existence and causation > existence > materiality > [noun] > thing or material object > cognizable by the senses or phenomenon
sensiblea1500
phenomenona1639
phenomen1644
palpability1841
effect1856
tangible1890
interphenomenon1944
a1500 (a1450) tr. Secreta Secret. (Ashm. 396) (1977) 73 (MED) The vertue intellectif, and denunciatif of figures or likenesse, other of interpretacion of all sensible [c1484 J. de Caritate sensibilys], gouerneth hym to 20 yeres.
1557 H. Iden tr. G. B. Gelli Circes x. sig. R.iiijv Because thou shouldeste be able to discerne, which are the proper sensibles of one sence.
1589 G. Puttenham Arte Eng. Poesie iii. xxiii. 219 This louely conformitie..betweene the sence and the sensible hath nature..most carefully obserued in all her owne workes.
1656 T. Stanley Hist. Philos. II. v. 10 In Sensibiles (saith Plato) neither magnitude nor quality is permanent.
1665 J. Glanvill Scepsis Scientifica ix. 50 A blind man conceives not colours, but under the notion of some other sensible.
a1704 T. Brown London & Lacedemonian Oracles in 3rd Vol. Wks. (1708) iii. 131 By Phenomena's we understand Sensibles, which we oppose to Intelligibles.
1788 T. Taylor in tr. Proclus Philos. & Math. Comm. I. 44 (note) All the ancient theologists..affirmed that the soul was of a certain middle nature and condition between intelligibles and sensibles.
1822 T. Taylor tr. Apuleius Metamorphosis 338 The senses..being aptly formed, by nature, to the perception of sensibles.
1856 R. A. Vaughan Hours with Mystics I. iii. i. 74 Those..who think they can storm the Intelligible by the Sensible.
1917 Jewish Q. Rev. 8 152 Knowables and sensibles exist before knowledge and sensation.
1959 N. Berkes tr. Z. Gökalp Turkish Nationalism & Western Civilization ii. 51 The sufi denied the real existence of the world of sensibles.
2005 A. G. Cooper Body in St Maximus Confessor i. 20 The spiritual life is..a ‘passage’ from the sensible to the intelligible, from the flesh to the Spirit.
2. A being that is capable of sensation; a sentient being. Cf. sensitive n. 3. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > [noun] > that is capable of sensation
sensitive?1533
sentient1603
sensible1642
the world > physical sensation > physical sensibility > [noun] > sentient being
feelerc1443
sensitive?1533
sentient1603
sensible1642
percipient1659
perceptive1694
1642 H. More Ψυχωδια Platonica sig. B7 Here's that aereall stole, that to each fashion Of sensibles is matter for their weed.
1683 T. Creech tr. Lucretius De Natura Rerum (ed. 2) Notes 31 This agrees to Plants as well as Sensibles, They are nourisht grow and live a like.
1709 R. Stewart Ess. Machine Perpetual Motion 11 Minerals, Vegetables, Sensibles, how they move in their proper Figures of Composition.
3. That which is capable of feeling (something specified). Cf. sensitive n. 2b. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > health and disease > ill health > pain > [noun] > person suffering > element in spiritual being
sensible1667
1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost ii. 278 Our torments also may in length of time Become our Elements,..our temper chang'd Into their temper; which must needs remove The sensible of pain. View more context for this quotation
4. A person possessing good sense and sound judgement; a judicious, reasonable, or practical person. Also with the and plural agreement: such people collectively.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > understanding > reason, faculty of reasoning > common sense > [noun] > person
sensible1747
level head1906
1747 Fool (1748) II. 323 The Sensibles are desired to confine theirs to Masquerades and Playhouses.
1829 Edinb. Lit. Jrnl. 1 Aug. 124/1 A second consideration, which has had its weight with the Sensibles, is, that..it is more important to instruct the judgment than improve the imagination.
1907 New Eng. Mag. May 379/1 The silly generally become inoculated with a germ of sense, and the sensible are only healthily so.
1986 Observer 23 Feb. 9/6 Mr Neil Kinnock and Dr David Owen are both reasonably placed to turn either Sillies or Sensibles into Patriots.
2000 T. Gray Marketing i. 7Sensibles’ who eat a nutritious balanced diet.
5. In plural. With the. Sensible views or attitudes. Obsolete. rare.
ΚΠ
1880 R. D. Blackmore Mary Anerley xli, in Harper's New Monthly Mag. July 276/2 After the sensitive age was past, and when the sensibles ought to reign..he fell..into a violent passion of love for a beautiful Jewish maid barely turned seventeen.
C. adv.
1. Perceptibly; = sensibly adv. 1a. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > physical sensibility > ability to be perceived by senses > [adverb]
sensiblya1398
sensually?a1425
palpablya1456
feelably?a1475
there1535
discernably1561
sensible1590
discernibly1645
distinguishably1704
perceptivelya1774
sensitively1797
1590 H. Swinburne Briefe Treat. Test. & Willes iv. f. 167 Although his childe did neuer crie, so that it did sensible breath or moue.
1646 H. Lawrence Of Baptisme i. 3 When hee shall yet speake more sensible to us, to our sight and to our touch.
2. With reference to speech or writing: so as to be easily understood or to make a strong impression on the mind; = sensibly adv. 2a. Obsolete.In quot. 1659 possibly in the sense ‘with feeling or emotion’ (cf. sense A. 9).
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > intelligibility > [adverb]
atreet1340
intelligibly1564
discernibly1645
sensible1659
apprehensiblya1682
apprehensively1692
comprehensibly1755
pronouncedly1785
cognizably1855
digestibly1879
understandably1921
society > leisure > the arts > literature > style of language or writing > vigour or force > [adverb]
largec1405
sensibly?a1425
eloquently1471
fectuallyc1485
in largea1500
pithily1533
enforcingly1571
emphatically1577
nervously1641
sensible1659
nervosely1678
forcefullya1774
cogentlya1797
accentedly1856
tersely1874
1659 tr. Certamen Brittanicum, Gallico Hispanicum 4 Pardon my deviation, he that speakes of his owne greifes, of his owne troubles speakes sensible.
1665 R. Hooke Micrographia 68 I shall endeavour to explain my meaning a little more sensible by a Scheme.

Compounds

C1. Forming complementary and parasynthetic adjectives (in sense A. 15).
ΚΠ
1747 Fool (1748) II. 170 One Parson Winterbottom, a grave, sensible-looking sort of a Blockhead.
1826 B. Disraeli Vivian Grey II. iv. i. 159 I remember a most interminable proser, that was blessed with a very sensible-sounding voice.
1895 J. G. Millais Breath from Veldt iv. 78 Oom Paul's mode of government is entirely unpopular amongst the more sensible-minded Dutch.
1912 Country Life in Amer. 15 Aug. 36/2 The sensible-headed dogs with semi-erect ears, small, dark eyes, and keen expression are plentiful to-day.
1976 Dædalus Winter 41 She writes back promptly with some sensible-seeming advice.
2005 N.Y. Times (National ed.) 15 May viii. 11/4 Sensible-shoed insurance salesmen and mild-mannered pharmacists all gaped.
C2.
sensible caloric n. [after German †sensibeler Wärmestoff (1796 in the passage translated in quot. 1800)] now historical the caloric fluid believed to cause a change in temperature of an object or substance (see caloric n. 1); cf. sensible heat n.
ΚΠ
1800 tr. F. A. C. Gren Princ. Mod. Chem. I. ii. 114 That caloric, which on the formation of liquid, and of elastic fluid bodies, is fixed, and becomes imperceptible, must of course again present itself in the character of sensible or free caloric [Ger. sensibeler oder freyer Wärmestoff], and cause an increase of temperature, whenever elastic fluid bodies are transformed into liquid or solid ones; or when liquid are changed into solid bodies.
1847 J. H. Ward Steam for Million ii. 16 (heading) Theory of Latent and Sensible Caloric as applied to Steam.
1949 Proc. Amer. Philos. Soc. 93 320/1 It seemed obvious that sensible caloric could be squeezed from a body by artificially pushing the atoms together into a closer proximity than the mutual repulsion of their caloric atmospheres would allow.
2005 Philos. Sci. 72 1354 Like Lavoisier, Laplace proposed that latent caloric causes volume expansion of gases while sensible caloric causes heating of gases.
sensible energy n. (originally) the energy of an object or substance which is perceptible and measurable, such as heat, motion, etc. (contrasted with latent energy n. at latent adj. and n. Compounds); (in later use) spec. the internal energy of a system associated with a change in the kinetic energies of its molecules without an accompanying change of state; cf. sensible heat n.
ΚΠ
1853 W. J. M. Rankine in London, Edinb. & Dublin Philos. Mag. & Jrnl. Sci. Feb. 106 All conceivable forms of energy may be distinguished into two kinds; actual or sensible, and potential or latent.]
1867 Ann. Rep. Amer. Inst. N.Y. 1866–7 812 in Docs. Assembly State N.Y. (90th Session, Doc. No. 244) XVIII If..the sensible energy or power of performing work is to be considered, its proper measure will be..similarly modified.
1906 J. V. V. Booraem Internal Energy 46 When evaporation occurs at the melting-point then, the sensible energy of the liquid condition becomes zero, and the latent energy a maximum.
1983 N. R. Sheridan in B. B. P. Lim Solar Energy Applic. in Tropics 67 In heat operated systems, thermal energy can be stored as sensible energy in water or rocks.
2006 Arctic, Antarctic, & Alpine Res. 38 143/2 Sensible energy is increasingly transferred laterally from the much warmer bare ground patches to the remaining snow patches.
sensible experience n. chiefly Philosophy = sense-experience n. at sense n. Compounds 3.
ΚΠ
1535 W. Marshall tr. Marsilius of Padua Def. of Peace i. iv. f. 13v Whiche thynge also euery man maye perceyue euydently, by sensyble experyence [L. inductione sensata].
1694 J. Locke Ess. Humane Understanding (new ed.) ii. i. 44 He, that would not deceive himself, ought to build his Hypothesis on matter of fact, and make it out by sensible experience.
1745 D. Fordyce Dialogues conc. Educ. I. xi. 366 Truth..is not easily apprehended by the Bulk of Mankind; especially if it be remote from common Observation, or abstracted from sensible Experience.
1890 W. James Princ. Psychol. II. xvii. 8 The physiological condition of this first sensible experience is probably nerve-currents coming in from many peripheral organs at once.
1959 A. C. Crombie Hist. Sci. from Augustine to Galileo (1995) II. i. i. 37 For some four centuries from the beginning of the 13th century, the question guiding scientific inquiry was to discover the real, the enduring, the intelligible behind the changing world of sensible experience.
2005 A. Ross in A. Parr Deleuze Dict. 138 According to Kant, the coherence and form of experience are the work of the mind rather than the ‘givens’ of sensible experience.
sensible heat n. the heat associated with a change in the temperature of an object or substance; spec. the energy released or absorbed when an object or substance undergoes a change in temperature without an accompanying change of state; contrasted with latent heat n.
ΚΠ
1770 Enq. Gen. Effects Heat 51 That sensible heat is converted into latent, and, though it no longer appears to act sensibly, resides in the water.
1839 A. Ure Dict. Arts 444 Heat..perceived by the touch and measured by the thermometer, which is called sensible heat.
1973 Financial Times 13 Apr. 21 (advt.) An Econovent heat recovery wheel.., utilising both latent and sensible heat, warms up the incoming fresh air with warmth from the outgoing stale air.
2016 A. de Gracia et al. in S.-N. Boemi et al. Energy Performance of Buildings xvi. 321 Sensible heat storage has two main advantages: it is cheap and is without the risks derived from the use of toxic materials.
sensible horizon n. a circle bounding that part of the earth's surface which is visible from a given point of observation; (also) a circle of the celestial sphere formed by the intersection of the celestial sphere and a plane that passes through a given point of observation; cf. horizon n. 1a.The plane that passes through a given point of observation and intersects with the celestial sphere so as to form a sensible horizon will be perpendicular to that point of observation's zenith-nadir line and tangential to the earth's surface.
ΚΠ
1550 W. Salesbury tr. Proclus Descr. Sphere sig. D.iv And there be .ii. Horizons, one sensyble, the other ymagyned by vnderstandynge. The sensyble Horizon is that, whiche of oure syght is lymyted at the vtmoste of our..kennynge.
1642 J. Milton Apol. Smectymnuus 46 The rationall horizon in heav'n is but one, and the sensible horizons in earth are innumerable.
1764 J. Ferguson Lect. Select Subj. viii. 156 The sensible horizon is that circle, which a man standing upon a large plane, observes to terminate his view all around, where the heaven and earth seem to meet.
1860 Glasgow Herald 4 July 5/1 Its [sc. a comet] position, as nearly as I could guess, without actual measurement, was..14° above the sensible horizon, and dipping towards the sea.
1945 Proc. Amer. Philos. Soc. 89 5/2 In the latitude of East Base the sun is below the sensible horizon at noon from late May until mid-July.
2007 A. Sofaer in S. H. Lekson Archit. Chaco Canyon, New Mexico (2008) ix. 234/1 The orientations of eleven of the fourteen major buildings are associated with one of the four solar or lunar azimuths on the sensible horizon.
sensible note n. [after French note sensible (1752)] Music (now historical) the leading note of a scale; cf. sensitive note n. at sensitive adj. and n. Compounds 1.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > music > musical sound > pitch > system of sounds or intervals > [noun] > diatonic scale series > notes in diatonic scale
keya1450
seventh1591
fifth1597
final1609
octave1656
sub-octave1659
keynote1677
mediant1721
sensible note?1775
subdominant?1775
submediant?1775
medius1782
leading note1786
nominal1786
subsemitone1799
superdominant1806
supertonic1806
tonic1806
subtonic1817
dominant1823
sensitive note1845
nominal note1884
?1775 W. Waring tr. J.-J. Rousseau Dict. Music 25 This note [sc. B flat] is almost always the sensible note in the major tones.
1854 Musical Times & Singing Class Circular 6 45/2 The G of this part becomes a sensible note.
1923 F. H. Martens tr. P. Landormy Hist. Music ii. 22 They softened their phrase-endings by the well-nigh regular employ of a ‘sensible note’.
2013 T. M. Tonietti tr. J.-P. Rameau in And yet it is Heard (2014) II. xi. 333 It is not possible to ascend diatonically to the note that generates a mode [tonality] except with the favour of its sensible note.
sensible part n. [Originally after French partie sensible (1650 in the passage translated in quot. 1657, or earlier)] Obsolete a matter regarded as acutely sensitive, or about which a person is liable to be acutely sensitive. Cf. sore point at sore adj.1 12b.
ΚΠ
1657 J. Dodington tr. C. Vialart Hist. Govt. France 533 Private interest is the most sensible part [Fr. la partie plus sensible] to touch a Prince on.
1751 tr. P. M. de l'Écluse des Loges Mem. Duke Sully (Dublin ed.) iii. 185 I touched James in his most sensible Part; I mean, his Ambition to immortalize his Memory.
1817 J. Mill Hist. Brit. India III. vi. i. 46 The dignity of the Directors was now touched in a most sensible part.
sensible perspiration n. [after post-classical Latin perspiratio sensibilis (1670 in the passage translated in quot. 1676)] sweat (as distinguished from water lost from the skin and lungs as vapour); cf. insensible adj. 1b.
ΚΠ
1676 J. Davies tr. S. Santorio Medicina Statica i. 3 Insensible perspiration [L. perspiratio insensibilis] alone is commonly wont to exceed all the sensible perspirations [L. sensibiles] put together.
1849 S. G. Morton Illust. Syst. Human Anat. 156 When this halitus escapes in the state of simple vapor, it is called insensible perspiration; but when the amount becomes so profuse as to wet the skin, it is termed the sensible perspiration.
2010 J. L. Kee et al. Fluids & Electrolytes Clin. Applic. (ed. 8) i. 11 In a relatively comfortable temperature would insensible perspiration or sensible perspiration occur?
sensible point n. Obsolete (a) the smallest area that can be visually distinguished by the eye; (also) a small area of the retina corresponding to this; (b) = sensible part n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > extension in space > measurable spatial extent > smallness > [noun] > that which is small > a small space or extent > least portion of space
sensible point1644
minimum1739
1644 K. Digby Two Treat. i. viii. 54 (side note) The least sensible poynt of a diaphanous body, hath roome sufficient to containe both ayre and light, together with a multitude of beames issuing from seuerall lights, without penetrating one an other.
1690 J. Locke Ess. Humane Understanding ii. xv. 96 A sensible Point, meaning thereby the least Particle of Matter or Space we can discern, which is ordinarily about a Second of a Circle, where of the Eye is the Centre.
a1715 Bp. G. Burnet Hist. Own Time (1724) I. 240 And, to touch the King in a sensible point, he said, the Covenant stuck so deep in their hearts, that no good could be done till that was rooted out.
1731 T. Dale tr. N. Regnault Philos. Conversat. I. xix. 329 The Image of the Object is distinct when all the Rays that proceed from every sensible Point of the Object happen to be reunited upon as many Points of the Retina.
1799 J. Wood Elem. Perspective i. i. 30 Perfect Vision, is that in which the rays of a single pencil are collected into a single physical or sensible point of the retina.
1819 W. Scott Bride of Lammermoor ii, in Tales of my Landlord 3rd Ser. II. 28 He had alarmed his fears in a most sensible point.
sensible soul n. Philosophy (now chiefly historical) the soul, or that part of the soul, which is associated with animal functions such as sensation, feeling, locomotion, etc.; = sensitive soul n. at sensitive adj. and n. Compounds 1.
ΚΠ
a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add. 27944) (1975) I. iii. ix. 98 Þe soule sensible þat ȝeueþ felinge haþ double myȝt and vertu of apprehendinge and of meuinge.
c1440 Prose Life Alexander (Thornton) (1913) 81 (MED) A swete reflaire enters in-till oure nosez, in þe whilke a sensible saule hase maste delite.
1604 S. Harward Disc. Soule & Spirit of Man ii. f. 8v The anima sensitiua, or sensible soule giuing sense and mouing, is common to man with brute creatures.
1752 tr. J. L. d'Alembert Plan French Encycl. Pref. 176 Division of the Faculties of the sensible Soul, into Motion and Sensation.
1821 R. Carlile Addr. Men of Sci. 8 Away with the idea that we have a sensible soul which lives distinct from and after the dissolution of the body.
1903 H. Manacorda & J. Muirhead tr. G. Villa Contemp. Psychol. iv. 92 These Aristotelian ideas continued throughout the Middle Ages, the neo-Platonic philosophers..attributing a divine and supernatural character to the rational soul, whilst the sensible soul was merged in the physical world.
2009 Early Sci. & Med. 14 735 Hector lacked a sensible soul (unable to feel) and a rational soul (lacking self-consciousness or the ability to reason).
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2016; most recently modified version published online June 2022).
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adj.n.adv.a1393
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