Sentence examples for the sensitiveness from inspiring English sources

Dictionary

the sensitiveness

noun

The ability to perceive sensation.

Exact(45)

So it seems that there is no such thing as a "generally sensitive" person, but rather that people differ quite widely in the sensitiveness of their specific chemosensory modalities [24].

"This race would not have been a tossup if Corzine had decided to run for re-election," said one senior Democratic strategist, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitiveness of the issue.

"The sensitiveness of the average police officer when dealing with a harassed and frightened woman left much to be desired," Ms. Deol wrote in a paper assessing general police conduct in 2005.

President Taft's inaugural address indicates, as might be expected, that he proposes to continue Mr Roosevelt's policy, but to carry it out in a less sensational manner, and with more regard to the sensitiveness of capital.

I suspect that one consideration was it was not in the victims' interests that medical records were produced in court as evidence, which is understandable, yet it serves to underline the sensitiveness of the material that Jamieson is reported as saying he viewed it out of curiosity.

The sensitiveness of these two has been compared.

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Similar(15)

The unconditioned stimulus was an electric stimulation of 0.2 0.4 mA depending on the individual sensitiveness of the animal (discernible reaction of the animal to the stimulation) whilst remaining below the vocalization threshold, delivered through stainless steel rods covering the floor (50 Hz, impulse widths 10 ms, pulsatile direct current).

The weak sensitiveness of the electronic subsystem to the temperature allows us further not to take temperature into account.

The large sensitiveness to the action of AuNPs was shown by the line of HT29 (6 μg/ml) as compared to the SPEV cells (12 μg/ml).

Further increase in the temperature gave insignificant production which might be due to the very sensitiveness of the organism to temperature [ 3].

Radium in Nature. Radium exists in minute proportion in every kind of soil and water; the extraordinary sensitiveness of the methods of analysis has made it possible to ascertain this fact.

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