sensorially

English

Etymology

sensorial + -ly

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /sɛnˈsɔː.ɹi.ə.li/

Adverb

sensorially (not comparable)

  1. With regard to the senses.
    • 2008 May 9, Ann Hornaday, “'Speed Racer': Take a Detour”, in The Washington Post:
      Larry and Andy Wachowski lay it on thick in "Speed Racer," a frenetic, densely layered, narratively scrambled blob of moviemaking that will leave viewers alternately baffled and sensorially stunned.
    • 2014, Kelly Cherry, “Faith, Hope, and Clarity”, in A Kind of Dream: Stories, Madison: Terrace Books, →ISBN, page 109:
      Nina’s life now, in her later years, was a struggle against pain and a failing effort to stay sensorially in tough with the world outside herself.
    • 2015 October 7, Qingguo Ma, Diandian Li, Qiang Shen, Wenwei Qiu, “Anchors as Semantic Primes in Value Construction: An EEG Study of the Anchoring Effect”, in PLOS One, →DOI:
      Since annoying sounds in our experiment were comparable to shocks or negative pictures in the way that they were all hedonic experience which are sensorially or emotionally aversive, we could expect to see difference of these ERP components if different anchor numbers were perceived as different cues to the following sounds.
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