senso
Portuguese
/ˈsẽ.su/, /ˈsẽ.so/
noun
Definitions
- sense
Etymology
Borrowed from Latin sēnsus (sense, feeling, perception, faculty of sensation) derived from Proto-Indo-European *sent- (feel, go, head for, true, being, head).
Origin
Proto-Indo-European
*sent-
Gloss
feel, go, head for, true, being, head
Concept
Semantic Field
Sense perception
Ontological Category
Action/Process
Kanji
頭
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- consensual English
- dissent English
- cōnsentīre Latin
- cōnsēnsus Latin
- dissēnsus Latin
- sensatio Latin
- sensatus Latin
- sensifer Latin
- sensificus Latin
- sensilis Latin
- sensus Latin
- sensōrius Latin
- sentio Latin
- sentio, sentiō, sentīre Latin
- sentīre Latin
- sēnsus Latin
- senso Italian
- stricto sensu French
- sensibilizar Spanish, Castilian
- *sent- Proto-Indo-European
- *sent-n- Proto-Indo-European
- *sentnos Proto-Indo-European
- stricto sensu Portuguese
- *gasinþiją Proto-Germanic
- *sinþaz Proto-Germanic
- *sunjō Proto-Germanic
- sens Polish
- assent Old French
- boin sens Old French
- هناییدن Persian
- *sinn gmw-pro
- *sentus Proto-Celtic
- *sinn Frankish
- sintėti Lithuanian