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    Use "sense of taste" in a sentence

    sense of taste example sentences

    sense of taste


    1. Next, explore your sense of taste


    2. I didn’t really know much about having a spiritual sense of taste back then, so it wasn’t until about a couple years later that I started realizing what a blessing that was


    3. Yuck! Let me tell you that the more the spiritual sense of taste is activated in our lives to sense sin, the more motivation we will have to stay clear of it, because it does not taste good at all! I’ve tasted things as mildly yucky as putting a copper coin under your mouth, to things that literally made me wanna spit to get the taste out of my mouth, because it tasted so bad (and sometimes I would go spit)


    4. Nevertheless, he persevered and once he conquered his sense of taste, he began to enjoy the natural flavors of vegetables in bland diet


    5. Or rather, make that “through his/her sense of taste


    6. It’s in the use of the sense of taste that real seduction starts


    7. The Almighty has granted him the sense of taste and put the different flavors and tastes in foods so that he enjoys and delights in having it, then he appreciates the favor of the Benefactor and praises Him for His Grace and by that, he draws near to Al’lah and lives in a bliss all his life which becomes a real heaven


    8. "His sense of taste has changed lately


    9. Can I then say that the America I saw has put cleanliness first, at the expense of taste? And—since all our perceptive nerve trunks including that of taste are not only perfectible but also capable of trauma—that the sense of taste tends to disappear and that strong, pungent, or exotic flavors arouse suspicion and dislike and so are eliminated?


    10. The least developed of all in Tarzan was the sense of taste, for he could eat luscious fruits, or raw flesh, long buried with almost equal appreciation; but in that he differed but slightly from more civilized epicures

    11. Who has not sometimes derived an inexpressible satisfaction from his food in which appetite had no share? I have been thrilled to think that I owed a mental perception to the commonly gross sense of taste, that I have been inspired through the palate, that some berries which I had eaten on a hillside had fed my genius


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