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sensitively

/sen-si-tiv/US // ˈsɛn sɪ tɪv //UK // (ˈsɛnsɪtɪv) //

敏锐地,敏感地,灵敏地,敏感的

Related Words

Definitions

adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : endowed with sensation; having perception through the senses.
    • : readily or excessively affected by external agencies or influences.
    • : having acute mental or emotional sensibility; aware of and responsive to the feelings of others.
    • : easily pained, annoyed, etc.
    • : pertaining to or connected with the senses or sensation.
    • : Physiology. having a low threshold of sensation or feeling.
    • : responding to stimuli, as leaves that move when touched.
    • : highly responsive to certain agents, as photographic plates, films, or paper.
    • : affected or likely to be affected by a specified stimulus: price-sensitive markets.
    • : involving work, duties, or information of a highly secret or delicate nature, especially in government: a sensitive position in the State Department.
    • : requiring tact or caution; delicate; touchy: a sensitive topic.
    • : constructed to indicate, measure, or be affected by small amounts or changes, as a balance or thermometer.
    • : Radio. easily affected by external influences, especially by radio waves.
n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a person who is sensitive.
    • : a person with psychic powers; medium.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • For example biometric data is something that’s seen as highly sensitive under the LGPD, but in the decree could still be shared between bodies.

  • All, I think Melanie would say, because she was able to come up with an answer to every question a skeptical, risk-sensitive investor might have.

  • Tests were conducted at Germany’s animal health institute and sensitive areas will now be cordoned off to try to prevent the disease spreading, Kloeckner said.

  • According to Dhamodharan, Mastercard is sensitive to privacy issues and is building its testing kit to reflect that.

  • Some tests may be very sensitive but less specific — in other words, good at picking up the presence of virus when it is there but less good at saying when the virus is not there.

  • And the Gävle Goat, apparently a sensitive creature, took the destruction hard.

  • The expo is introduced by Mayor Anne Hildalgo, who describes it as a “sensitive reading of the upheavals in French society.”

  • But they are also sensitive to pressure and attention from the West.

  • It is this very sensitive issue that has galvanized widespread resistance from previously loyal campesinos.

  • He was highly perceptive and exquisitely sensitive to everything around him.

  • He felt, in his sensitive way, that the two sweet-souled Englishwomen had deepened and sanctified his love for Jean.

  • The eyebrows were low and thick, the upper lip was sensitive, quivering sometimes as she talked, but the lower was firm and full.

  • He was beset by his sensitive dislike to mix in other people's affairs, but almost angrily he overcame it.

  • And here he might have stopped with safety; but his roused, suspicious, sensitive nature, would not suffer him.

  • It is a sensitive test, and, when positive, is absolute proof of the presence of blood.