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Discover Ludwig'these senses' is a valid phrase in written English
You can use it to refer to the faculties of sight, hearing, smell, taste, and touch. For example: "These senses help us to experience and interact with the world around us."
Exact(60)
The bases stated are consistent in these senses.
Some of these senses include "a person admitted free to a theater, sporting event, etc".
In these senses, ming signifies all that is outside the purview of human effort to change.
The sum of these senses working together makes a well-integrated system for finding prey.
It's unbelievable that he could describe all these senses, these emotions.
And default in any of these senses would risk a huge collapse of confidence.
Being without one of these senses can be challenging and being without two can make life extremely difficult.
"If she is very lucky she may regain these senses but this would take many months, if it happens at all," he wrote.
What is remarkable, clearly, is the degree to which Ms. Glennie has honed all these senses: touch, sight and what remains of hearing in the standard sense.
Notably, the term "hardworking", and the status and patronising genuflection that goes with it, is something that is handed down from above in most of these senses.
Decimation, however, had another meaning that precedes both of these senses: tithing, or a tax of one-tenth, which according to the Oxford English Dictionary dates from 1549.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com