sensate means perceived by one or more of the senses. Lexicurio rates it Rare gem — a strength score of 79 out of 100.
sensate is pronounced /ˈsɛn.seɪt/.
Etymology
From Middle English sensat, from Late Latin sensatus (“able to sense”), from sensus (“sense”).
adj
- Perceived by one or more of the senses.
- Having the ability to sense things physically.“Mendicant was able to postpone its inevitable annihilation for [106:S] with its attempt to flee. But the last of its core vessels hangs before me now; crippled and defeated but still sensate.”
- Felt or apprehended through a sense, or the senses.“To say that Volitions which are acts of the Intellectual Soul must be sensate, and so make a Species on the phantasie, as sensate things do”
verb
- To feel or apprehend by means of the senses; to perceive.“to sensate light, or an odour”