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View synonyms for sensibility

sensibility

[sen-suh-bil-i-tee]

noun

plural

sensibilities 
  1. capacity for sensation or feeling; responsiveness or susceptibility to sensory stimuli.

  2. mental susceptibility or responsiveness; quickness and acuteness of apprehension or feeling.

    Synonyms: awareness, alertness
  3. keen consciousness or appreciation.

  4. sensibilities, emotional capacities.

  5. Sometimes sensibilities. liability to feel hurt or offended; sensitive feelings.

  6. Often sensibilities. capacity for intellectual and aesthetic distinctions, feelings, tastes, etc..

    a man of refined sensibilities.

  7. the property, as in plants or instruments, of being readily affected by external influences.



sensibility

/ ˌsɛnsɪˈbɪlɪtɪ /

noun

  1. the ability to perceive or feel

  2. (often plural) the capacity for responding to emotion, impression, etc

  3. (often plural) the capacity for responding to aesthetic stimuli

  4. mental responsiveness; discernment; awareness

  5. (usually plural) emotional or moral feelings

    cruelty offends most people's sensibilities

  6. the condition of a plant of being susceptible to external influences, esp attack by parasites

“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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Other Word Forms

  • hypersensibility noun
  • nonsensibility noun
  • unsensibility noun
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Word History and Origins

Origin of sensibility1

First recorded in 1325–75; Middle English sensibilite, from Middle French, from Late Latin sēnsibilitās. See sensible, -ity
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Synonym Study

Sensibility, susceptibility, sensitiveness, sensitivity refer to capacity to respond to or be affected by something. Sensibility is, particularly, capacity to respond to aesthetic and emotional stimuli: the sensibility of the artist. Susceptibility is the state or quality of being impressionable and responsive, especially to emotional stimuli; in the plural it has much the same meaning as sensibility : a person of keen susceptibilities. Sensitiveness is the state or quality of being sensitive, of having a capacity of sensation and of responding to external stimuli: sensitiveness to light. Sensitivity is a special capability of being sensitive to physiological, chemical action or a tendency to be easily affected by the adverse reactions of others: the sensitivity of a nerve; sensitivity to criticism.
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Hailing from small-town Australia, he became bored with censoring his work for family papers and cartooning about the weather, seeking something bigger to fit his burgeoning punk sensibilities.

From Salon

Now we have 10 times the viewers and we’re No. 1, so in my mind I’m going, I want the same sensibility, but I don’t want to completely confuse the viewers.

That assumed contradiction mirrored Suede’s own sensibility, which resisted tidy prescriptions of what working-class representation should look like.

The second season premiere, appropriately titled “The Ties that Grind,” is violent, gory, and trades in uproarious humor that doesn’t give a bleep about delicate ears and sensibilities.

From Salon

Additionally, “Almost Famous,” Cameron Crowe’s mostly autobiographical film about a teenager interviewing a rock band, seemed the closest to his sensibility.

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