Use "perceptible" in a sentence

1. The sound was barely perceptible .

2. Pasternak gave him a barely perceptible smile.

3. Here, there was a perceptible change.

4. His voice carried a barely perceptible quaver.

5. The difference is scarcely perceptible to the average reader.

6. So no ether drag effects are perceptible to us.

7. His lips curved in a barely perceptible smile.

8. 3 His lips curved in a barely perceptible smile.

9. A barely perceptible delay as you gaze through it.

10. 11 The difference is scarcely perceptible to the average reader.

11. There was a barely perceptible movement in his right arm.

12. Audibility: 1 n quality or fact or degree of being audible or perceptible by the ear Synonyms: audibleness Antonyms: inAudibility , inaudibleness the quality of not being perceptible by the ear Type of: perceptibility the property of being perceptible by the mind or the senses

13. InAudibility, inaudibleness - the quality of not being perceptible by the ear.

14. These immortal ideas, things barely perceptible are the most precious things of life.

15. CabBoots pursues a more intuitive mode of information delivery: the feedback is tactilely perceptible.

16. The aromas and flavours of onion and the various spices should be perceptible.

17. Avulsion is a sudden and perceptible change in the land brought about by water

18. Synonyms for Apprehensible include perceptible, detectable, discernible, appreciable, palpable, distinguishable, discernable, sensible, obvious and noticeable

19. When he asked if she wanted something to eat, she gave a barely perceptible nod.

20. Synonyms for Appreciable include detectable, perceptible, considerable, discernible, distinguishable, marked, measurable, noticeable, significant and substantial

21. the perceptible acceleration at global level of investment in nano-scale R&D and its applications

22. A scarcely perceptible smile passed over Kutuzov's podgy face, disfigured by the scar of a wound.

23. 21 Bombay Coarse and raw on the nose with sweet rubbery notes but little perceptible juniper.

24. 1. Audibility - quality or fact or degree of being audible or perceptible by the ear

25. According to Reynolds, there has been a slight but perceptible change in public attitude lately.

26. the perceptible acceleration at global level of investment in nano-scale R&D and its applications;

27. And slowly, slowly, so gradually that it was barely perceptible, the watchers became aware of a change.

28. He gave a barely perceptible nod as if he had read her mind and applauded her attitude.

29. From the 14C to the nearly modern, there is a perceptible drop in the floor level.

30. Right across the social scale, religion made little perceptible difference to the outward shape of life.

31. The roses in the garden of the aunts were covered by a thin, barely perceptible layer of dust.

32. A difference of color in the stars - oftener read of than seen in England - was really perceptible here.

33. Among Bush's advisers there is a perceptible difference between the more conciliatory state department and the hardline military.

34. These compulsions are usually obvious to observers, but seldom perceptible to the people caught in their grip.

35. The term acoustic tomography refers to the perceptible sounds that are caused by the mechanical impulses used for measuring.

36. This was followed by the barely perceptible rustle of snow crystals hitting the newly exposed portion of the roof.

37. There are plenty of things which exist and are indisputably real, despite not being perceptible to your unaided senses.

38. Here there are established relationships, sizes and perceptible properties which might be talked about, without offending any child.

39. Audibility, usually measured in decibels (dB, dBA) is the state or quality of being perceptible by the human ear

40. A recording unit (1) records optical, acoustic, and/or other perceptible events (S) and generates associated recording data (SA).

41. A small, elderly man, smartly dressed, with an exceptionally lively, intelligent face and an immediately perceptible air of sadness.

42. Slight Constrictions, not perceptible in views of the embryo as a transparent object, mark off three vesicles in the brain

43. 24 This was followed by the barely perceptible rustle of snow crystals hitting the newly exposed portion of the roof.

44. How does the adjective Appreciable contrast with its synonyms? Some common synonyms of Appreciable are palpable, perceptible, ponderable, sensible, and tangible

45. Cycling uphill in the film, the brake will offer resistance to the extent that the percentage gradient is actually perceptible.

46. In a way unseen to human eye and yet perceptible to the man Adam, God walked in that lovely Garden of Eden.

47. And owners note a perceptible increase in door-hangers, fliers and other pleas from agents to put their homes up for sale.

48. Qui est clairement perceptible à la vue ou à l'esprit ; visible, évident : Des traces de pas très Apparentes

49. ‘a vicious and Consciously dishonest hatchet job’ 1.1 In a way that is directly perceptible to and under the control of the person concerned

50. Princeton's WordNet (0.00 / 0 votes)Rate this definition: Audibility, audibleness (noun) quality or fact or degree of being audible or perceptible by the ear.

51. Saving a Bitmap in JPEG format reduces its file size without losing any perceptible quality, making it a good choice for textures and online images

52. While all these words mean "the quality that makes a thing perceptible to the olfactory sense," Aroma suggests a somewhat penetrating usually pleasant odor

53. Definition of Amaurosis : partial or complete loss of sight occurring especially without an externally perceptible change in the eye Other Words from Amaurosis Example Sentences Learn More about …

54. Finally, it is yet another feature that they system emit status signals perceptible to the human senses when normal and abnormal temperature conditions are detected in the transmitter.

55. Spelling bayouc, Bayouque.]An inlet from the Gulf of Mexico, from a lake, or from a large river, sometimes sluggish, sometimes without perceptible movement except from tide and wind.

56. Appreciable adjective significant, marked, obvious, considerable, substantial, visible, evident, pronounced, definite, noticeable, clear-cut, discernible, measurable, material, recognizable, detectable, perceptible, distinguishable, ascertainable, perceivable This has not had an Appreciable …

57. Spelling bayouc, Bayouque.] an inlet from the gulf of mexico, from a lake, or from a large river, sometimes sluggish, sometimes without perceptible movement except from tide and wind

58. Spelling bayouc, Bayouque.] An inlet from the Gulf of Mexico, from a lake, or from a large river, sometimes sluggish, sometimes without perceptible movement except from tide and wind

59. Spelling bayouc, Bayouque.] An inlet from the Gulf of Mexico, from a lake, or from a large river, sometimes sluggish, sometimes without perceptible movement except from tide and wind.

60. Spelling bayouc, Bayouque.] An inlet from the Gulf of Mexico, from a lake, or from a large river, sometimes sluggish, sometimes without perceptible movement except from tide and wind

61. The Copyright symbol is usually tucked away at the edge or a corner of a published or produced material that’s considered “visually perceptible” either directly or with a machine’s help

62. The Prime Minister said that while the absence of Government in a sphere of activity should be perceptible, its presence in a sphere of activity should not become a burden.

63. Spelling bayouc, Bayouque.] An inlet from the Gulf of Mexico, from a lake, or from a large river, sometimes sluggish, sometimes without perceptible movement except from tide and wind.

64. Spelling bayouc, Bayouque.] An inlet from the Gulf of Mexico, from a lake, or from a large river, sometimes sluggish, sometimes without perceptible movement except from tide and wind.

65. They concern Allogenes, "the Stranger" (or "foreigner"), a half-human, half-divine capable of communicating with realms beyond the sense-perceptible world, into the unknowable.

66. Spelling bayouc, Bayouque.] an inlet from the gulf of mexico, from a lake, or from a large river, sometimes sluggish, sometimes without perceptible movement except from tide and wind

67. Spelling bayouc, Bayouque.] An inlet from the Gulf of Mexico, from a lake, or from a large river, sometimes sluggish, sometimes without perceptible movement except from tide and wind.

68. But where disbursed and present in barely perceptible quantities, it is more akin to a slow swoosh, creating a spiral of heat that starts a tornado effect in the atmosphere.

69. ‘a Barely perceptible pause’ ‘She nodded her head, Barely able to keep the silly grin from her face.’ ‘However, Mr Selwood says the fear of being homeless has left him a broken man Barely able to eat.’

70. Because our products perfectly combine motor technology, aerodynamics and electronics , our customers create high-quality end products that function at the highest level, whether they are barely perceptible air-conditioning installations or high-performance, energy-saving heating plants .

71. Barely furnished {adj} kümmerlich möbliert: Barely furnished {adj} notdürftig möbliert: Barely intelligible {adj} kaum verständlich: Barely one: kaum einer: traffic Barely passable {adj} [roads, ways etc.] schwer passierbar / schwerpassierbar [Straßen, Wege etc.] Barely perceptible {adj} kaum vernehmbar

72. Webster defines a Cyclorama as “a curved wall used as a background of a stage set to suggest unlimited space.” To elaborate further, a cyc is any type of walled background incorporating one or more curved surfaces that are used to create a background with no perceptible beginning or end

73. Barely (adverb) only just; almost not "a Barely perceptible pause" "she nodded, Barely able to speak" Barely (adverb) only a very short time before "they had Barely sat down before forty policemen swarmed in" Barely (adverb) in a simple and sparse way "their Barely furnished house" Barely (adverb) openly; explicitly.

74. Come (v.) elementary intransitive verb of motion, Old English cuman "to move with the purpose of reaching, or so as to reach, some point; to arrive by movement or progression;" also "move into view, appear, beCome perceptible; Come to oneself, recover; arrive; assemble" (class IV strong verb; past tense cuom, com, past participle cumen), from Proto-Germanic *kwem-(source also of Old Saxon