You searched for: “sensibility
sensibility (s) (noun), sensibilities (pl)
1. The capacity to respond intelligently and perceptively to intellectual and moral or aesthetic events or values, especially those which are considered of a higher level or a refinement: The way Barbara dressed suggested the sensibility of an artist.

We all should learn to have regard for other people's sensibilities.

2. The ability to perceive and have responsiveness: According to the botanist, it is now possible to measure the sensibility of plants to light and heat.
This entry is located in the following unit: senso-, sens-, sensi-, sensori-, sent- (page 7)
Word Entries containing the term: “sensibility
electromuscular sensibility
The responsiveness of muscles to electric stimulus.
This entry is located in the following units: electro-, electr-, electri- (page 46) -ibility (page 2)
protopathic sensibility
A reference to the bodily sensations of fast localized pain, slow, poorly localized pain, and temperature.

Protopathic sensibility is transmitted principally along the thinnest nerve fibers, which lack a myelin sheath and conduct nerve impulses slowly.

It is related primarily to the spinothalamic system (extending between the spinal cord and the thalamus which is the large oval area of gray matter within the brain that relays nerve impulses from the basal ganglia to the cerebellum, both parts of the brain that control and regulate muscle movement), whose receptive neuron fields are often nonspecific and very large, covering the entire body.

This entry is located in the following units: -ibility (page 5) proto-, prot- + (page 5)