1[countableC, uncountableU]FEEL HOT/COLD/TIRED ETC a feeling that you get from one of your five senses, especially the sense of touch 〔感官的〕感觉;〔尤指〕触觉
burning/prickling/tingling etc sensation
One sign of a heart attack is a tingling sensation in the left arm.
心脏病发作的一个征兆是左臂有刺痛感。
sensation of
a sensation of heat
一种灼热感
2[countableC]IMAGINE a feeling that is difficult to describe, caused by a particular event, experience, or memory 〔由某一事件、经历或记忆引起的难以描述的〕感受,感觉
sensation that
Caroline had the sensation that she was being watched.
卡罗琳有种感觉,有人在监视她。
strange/curious/odd sensation
It was a strange sensation – I felt I’d been there before.
这是一种奇怪的感觉——我觉得以前曾到过那里。
3[uncountableU]FEEL HOT/COLD/TIRED ETC the ability to feel things, especially through your sense of touch 知觉,感觉能力〔尤指触觉〕
Jerry realized that he had no sensation in his legs.
杰里意识到自己双腿都没有了知觉。
4INTERESTING[countableC usually singular]extremeexcitement or interest, or someone or something that causes this 轰动,激动;引起轰动的人[事]
cause/create a sensation
The sex scenes in the film caused a sensation.
这部影片中的性爱镜头引起了轰动。
pop/fashion/media etc sensation
the latest pop sensation from England
来自英格兰的引起轰动的最新流行歌曲
nCOLLOCATIONS – Meanings 1 & 2
adjectives
pleasant
She was enjoying the pleasant sensation of being in the warm water.
unpleasant
I felt a rather unpleasant sensation in my chest.
strange/odd
As we looked at each other I had a strange sensation.
a physical sensation
Babies soon learn to recognize the physical sensation of hunger.
a burning sensation
These chemicals can cause a burning sensation or rash.
a prickling sensation (=a feeling that your skin is stinging)
He felt a prickling sensation on the back of his neck.
a tingling sensation (=a feeling that your skin is stinging slightly)
She felt a tingling sensation, like a mild electric shock.
a choking sensation (=a feeling that you cannot breathe)
A choking sensation filled my throat.
verbs
feel/have/experience a sensation
He felt a tingling sensation down his left side.
cause/produce a sensation
The drug can produce strange sensations in some patients.
Examples from the Corpus
sensation• They were a sensation, a stirring, something she could not have sworn came from outside herself.• The drug helps to improvemusclefunction and sensation after an accident.• An involuntary action is set up which causes him to withdraw his hand even before he experiences any sensation of pain.• She felt a coldsensation as the icy water dripped down her back.• A cold sensation suddenly ran down my spine.• This is the headysensation that most travelers relish, the freedom that comes from feeling unaccounted for and unaccountable.• A commonsign of braintumours is a tingly, numbsensation in the toes and fingertips.• She was not in the least embarrassed and felt something of an oppositesensation, which had no name.• It really was a rather pleasantsensation.• The realsensation came, however, during the fourth number.• The fear of pain can be worse than the sensation of pain.• The sensation is a thrilling one, and I enjoy it immensely.• Eventually, when the pitch is low and the voice is forward, you will feel the tingling sensation on your lips.
burning/prickling/tingling etc sensation• When this happens the esophagus becomes irritated and inflamed, causing a burning sensation that has the potential to awaken a sleeper.• But the thick, hardenedlayers of deadskinsometimespress on the nerve, causing a burning sensation when you walk.• She felt him draw her closer up against his body - and suddenly a tingling sensation started somewhere inside her.• A prickling sensation between my eyes made my nose run and white-hotadrenalinscalded the subcutaneous layer beneath my skin.• A prickling sensation running the length of her spine told her that Rourke had made an appearance.• Later I experienced a curiousburning sensation during micturition.• Suspense in fiction, that tingling sensation that makes us keep turning the pages, seems to arise in two ways.
sensation that• For some people this creates an overload of sensation that is too much to bear.• Be sensitive to the particular patterns of sensations thatcomfort your child.• The time zone changes as we went westfurther increased our sensation that time was no longer a hard fact.• One of those illusions was my persistentsensation that my personality was dissolving.• The mask made him seem menacing, and she suddenly had the sensation that with Lucenzo she was playing with fire.• The sensation that ran through her body into her limbsweakened and scared her.• Suspense in fiction, that tingling sensation that makes us keep turning the pages, seems to arise in two ways.• How I had welcomed his physicality, his touch: the tiniestsensation thatyes, it might be all right.
cause/create a sensation• Her Persianlambcoat had overshadowed the treasurer's three-year-old mink, and her hat had caused a sensation.• The see-throughtrousersuit she had designed herself had caused a sensation at Rachel Ansorge's party.• In I 779 he created a sensation with a pocketchronometer, called No. 36.• The newscaused a sensation because it proved that Dorlin still had golddeposits.• The opera caused a sensation in Moscow.• This caused a sensation in Western countries where the threat of seriousinfectiousdisease had come to be considered remote.• This is a show that would cause a sensation in London or New York.
Originsensation
(1600-1700)Medieval Latinsensatio, from Late Latinsensatus“having sense”, from Latinsensus; → SENSE1