0 past simple and past participle of sense --
1 to feel or experience something without being able to explain exactly how: --
Perhaps he had sensed the rootlessness and evanescence of the power and influence of evangelists without their own base.
Our argument is that patterns in the global array might be sensed directly, without reduction to structures in individual forms of energy.
The single-support phase is sensed by the currentintake-feedback from the motors.
An additional information source that is now widely available is remotely sensed information.
The mapping of sensed input data to processing algorithms is the most complex and subjective aspect of system design.
Force, sensed in each contact point, is measured by a voltage generated by an equivalent electrical circuit.
Nor can it be uttered as 'the present', since once uttered, it is not present any more; yet, it can be sensed.
There are other kinds of emergencies not sensed by the sensors.