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"sensitive to sound" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use this phrase when you want to describe something or someone that is easily affected by and/or aware of sound. For example: The young child was very sensitive to sound, so she could easily detect the faintest noise.
Exact(20)
Also, bass are very sensitive to sound".
And yet she was unusually sensitive to sound.
As a musician, Mr. Lawson is sensitive to sound, which is probably why the news emanating from his radiator grille tends to grate on his nerves.
Of interest is the high percentage of vertigo (43 %), nausea (46 %), sensitive to sound (35 %) and light (33 %) in this group.
The ear, in effect, becomes less sensitive to sound and the amount of time the ear needs to recover from a TSS varies".
All fish have internal "ears," air-filled swim bladders sensitive to sound waves, and "lateral line" sense organs that detect motion in surrounding water.
Similar(39)
The human ear is sensitive to sounds ranging in frequency from 20 hertz to 20 kilohertz.
Condenser microphones are more sensitive to sounds and good for recording instruments, but are typically more fragile and expensive.
My sleep was poor, broken by nightmares and bizarre dreams, and upon waking I found myself excruciatingly sensitive to sounds.
Sharks seem to be remarkably sensitive to sounds of low frequency and to possess extraordinary faculty for directional hearing.
The ear gives unequal weights to certain frequencies, making it particularly sensitive to sounds in the range of 1,000 to 6,000 hertz, scientists say.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com