feel [v1: Feel, v2: Felt, v3: Felt]
Kelime Anlamı :

1. hissetmek.
2. hissetme.
3. duygu.
4. his.
5. dokunmak.
6. anlamak.
7. hissetmek, duymak: I feel good. Kendimi iyi hissediyorum.
8. (felt).
9. temas.
10. sezinlemek.
Sahne Örnekleri :
Eş Anlamlı Kelimeler :
Tanımlar :
1. to perceive through the sense of touch: feel the velvety smoothness of a peach.
2. to perceive as a physical sensation: feel a sharp pain; feel the cold.
3. to touch.
4. to examine by touching. see synonyms at touch.
5. to test or explore with caution: feel one's way in a new job.
6. to undergo the experience of: felt my interest rising; felt great joy.
7. to be aware of; sense: felt the anger of the crowd.
8. to be emotionally affected by: she still feels the loss of her dog.
9. to be persuaded of (something) on the basis of intuition, emotion, or other indefinite grounds: I feel that what the informant says may well be true.
10. to believe; think: she felt his answer to be evasive.
11. to experience sensations of touch.
12. to produce a particular sensation, especially through the sense of touch: the sheets felt smooth.
13. to produce a particular impression; appear to be; seem: it feels good to be home. see usage note at well2.
14. to be conscious of a specified kind or quality of physical, mental, or emotional state: felt warm and content; feels strongly about the election.
15. to seek or explore something by the sense of touch: felt for the light switch in the dark.
16. to have compassion or sympathy: I feel for him in his troubles.
17. perception by or as if by touch; sensation: a feel of autumn in the air.
18. the sense of touch: a surface that is rough to the feel.
19. an act or instance of touching or feeling.
20. vulgar an act or instance of sexual touching or fondling.
21. the nature or quality of something as perceived by or as if by the sense of touch: "power steering that seems overassisted, eliminating road feel” ( mark ginsburg).
22. overall impression or effect; atmosphere: "gives such disparate pictures . . . a crazily convincing documentary feel” ( Stephen king).
23. intuitive awareness or natural ability: has a feel for decorating.
24. feel out to try cautiously or indirectly to ascertain the viewpoint or nature of.
25. feel up vulgar to touch or fondle (someone) sexually.
26. feel in (one's) bones to have an intuition of.
27. feel like informal to have an inclination or desire for: felt like going for a walk.
28. feel like (oneself) to sense oneself as being in one's normal state of health or spirits: I just don't feel like myself today.
29. feel (one's) oats to be energetic and playful.
30. feel (one's) oats to act in a self-important manner.
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
1. to have a sensation or sense-perception of. specifically
2. to be or become aware of through material action upon any nerves of sensation other than those of sight, hearing, taste, and smell; have a sensation (other than those of the above-mentioned senses) of: as, to feel the cold; to feel a lump in the throat (through involuntary closure); to feel an inclination to cough. [the application of the word to the normal action of the higher senses is obsolete, except in the abstract meaning of perceiving by means of sensation in general: as, the higher animals feel light, heat, sound, etc. see def. 2.]
3. to perceive by the sense of smell; smell.
4. to have a perception of (some external or internal condition of things) through a more or less complex mental state involving vague sensation: as, to feel the floor sinking; to feel one's mind becoming confused; to feel the approach of age.
5. in general, to perceive or have a mental sense of; be conscious of; have a distinct or indistinct perception or mental impression of: as, to feel pleasure or pain; to feel the beauty of a landscape.
6. to regard with feeling or emotion; be aroused to feeling (especially disagreeable feeling) by: as, he felt his disgrace keenly.
7. reflexively, to have a sensation, feeling, perception, or impression concerning; perceive clearly to be.
8. to try by touch; examine by touching with the hands or otherwise; test by contact: as, to feel a piece of cloth; to feel the ground with the feet; a blind man feels his way with a stick.
9. hence to make trial of in any way; test carefully or cautiously: as, to feel one's way in an undertaking; to feel the market by a small venture.
10. to have experience of; suffer under: as, to feel the vengeance of an enemy.
11.
12. to have perception by means of the sense of touch or by physical contact; experience sensation of any kind, except that received through sight, hearing, taste, or smell; loosely, to have a sensation of any kind: as, to feel sore or ill; to feel cold.
13. to have perception, especially vague perception or impression; have a mental sense of something.
14. to recognize or regard one's self as; be consciously: as, to feel hurried; to feel called on to do something.
15. to experience feeling or emotion; be aroused to emotion.
16. to give or produce sensation or feeling; especially, to produce sensation of touch, or organic sensations.
17. to make examination by the sense of touch; grope.
18. to be inwardly moved: followed by an infinitive: as, I feel to sympathize with him.
19. to sympathize with; be sorry for.
20. much; many.
21. much.
22. the sense or a sensation of touch.
23. A sensation of any kind, or a vague mental impression or feeling.
24. that quality in an object by which it appeals to the sense of touch.
from The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia