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extrasensory perception

超感知觉,超感官知觉,感外之音,感外之物

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : ESP.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • Catholic enough to have considered the priesthood, he also loved philosophy and divination and believed in extrasensory perception.

  • His hero, Bruce Springsteen, is a gazillionaire, but he still manages to come across as a regular guy, so perception is reality.

  • Clinton is further back in history, and there is a perception that back then everything was rainbows and sunshine and gumdrops.

  • That perception is false and often reflects not just ignorance but also elitism and racism.

  • Their interest, as ever, is in pushing the perception that Washington is dysfunctional.

  • It was negative, and very personal, and most of it was probably my own perception of things.

  • Here, as in so many of these childish admirations, we have to do not with a purely æsthetic perception.

  • Yet, if one looks closely, under the froth and foppery, some of the charm and perception of the man still shines through.

  • With children of finer perception the transition to a correct profile view may be carried much further.

  • Born on March 29, 1769, he early distinguished himself by his precocity and his quickness of perception.

  • Forcing himself to believe that he had been the victim of some kind of illusory perception, he vigorously restrained his feelings.