Similar words: perception, perceptible, apperception, imperceptible, receptive, deceptive, percept, intercept. Meaning: [pər'septɪv /pə'-] adj. 1. of or relating to perception 2. having the ability to perceive or understand; keen in discernment.
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61, The Great Pyrenees is a highly intelligent and very perceptive breed.
62, This thesis investigates the intonation of the interrogative sentence in Mandarin Chinese from acoustic and perceptive perspectives.
63, Seeing an organism in its ecological setting permits a very perceptive analysis of its natural history.
64, Perceptive and even-tempered , Lupin deflected Snape's hatred and gave poor Neville Longbottom his first moment of glory when facing the Boggart.
65, a highly perceptive comment.
66, Prosodic information such as position of syllable in sentence and number of syllables in a prosodic word is the main factors of syllable distribution in perceptive multi-space of syllables.
67, According to the semantic distinctions of themes, the verbs fall into 5 classes, namely the behavioral verb, the state verb, the rendering verb, the perceptive verb and the linking verb.
68, Her poetry tells a progressive, perceptive and broad-minded Li Qing - zhao who is not inferior to any man.
69, Telepathy can be either projective or perceptive, we either send or receive.
More similar words: perception, perceptible, apperception, imperceptible, receptive, deceptive, percept, intercept, inception, deception, reception, exception, sceptical, conception, exceptional, susceptible, exceptionally, receptionist, misconception, susceptibility, perceive, perceived, captive, adaptive, disruptive, preemptive, redemptive, except, accept, precept.