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SVC Sense Verbs - Viewing the World Through Your Filters

Last updated: May 5, 2026

You’re on hour three. The Allen key is digging into your palm, and the bookshelf you’re building is definitely leaning to the left.

The little cartoon man in the instructions is smiling, holding a perfectly assembled piece of furniture. But your reality is different. This feels wobbly[TRANS], you think. And it looks crooked[TRANS].

This isn't just about furniture. It's about how English separates a cold, objective fact from your personal, sensory experience.

There are exactly five core verbs that do this job. They are the sense verbs: look, sound, feel, smell, and taste. Master these five, and you've mastered the art of sharing your personal reality.

These verbs act like a filter you place over the world. They connect a person or thing (a subject) to your description of it (an adjective). They build a bridge between the thing and your opinion of the thing.

That new cafe looks cozy.

Note:You haven't been inside. This is your impression from the outside. You are describing the cafe's appearance, not an action it's performing.

This plan sounds risky.

Note:The plan isn't making a noise. This is your intellectual or emotional reaction to hearing the details. It's your "gut feeling" expressed as a sound. Now, here is the place where almost everyone trips up. Because these words are verbs, our brains want to modify them with adverbs. We want to describe *how* something is performing an action. So we might say, `She looks sadly`[TRANS]. But this is wrong. She isn't performing the action of "looking" in a sad way (like `She looked sadly at the rain`[TRANS]). The verb `look` here is just a connector. It links "she" to the state you perceive: "sad." The correct way is always with an adjective. You are describing the subject, not the verb.

I know you're trying a new recipe, but this tastes... different.

Note:A gentle way to give negative feedback. You're describing the food's quality (`different`), not the action of tasting. Saying `It tastes strangely`[TRANS] would be grammatically incorrect in this context. [OPTIONAL-COMMENT]

No offense, but your roommate's music sounds terrible.

Note:You're sharing your direct sensory experience. The music isn't *performing the act of sounding* in a terrible way; its inherent quality, to you, *is* terrible.

The Subjectivity Engine

This isn't just a grammar rule. It's a core mechanic of English for expressing your internal world. These five verbs are your "Subjectivity Engine." They turn objective reports into personal broadcasts.

Compare these two sentences:

  1. He is wearing a wrinkled shirt. (Objective fact. Anyone can verify this.)
  2. He looks tired. (Subjective perception. This is your filter, your interpretation.)

The first is journalism. The second is empathy. The first is a camera; the second is a painter. When you use a sense verb, you are not claiming to be a source of truth. You are sharing your unique human perspective. You are telling someone how the world is landing on you.

This is why these verbs are so powerful in social situations. You seem upset[TRANS] is softer and more inviting than You are upset[TRANS]. It opens a door for conversation instead of stating a potentially incorrect fact. You're offering your perception and asking for confirmation.

The Golden Rule: Sense verbs don't describe the world; they describe your version of the world. Use an adjective to describe the thing you're sensing, not an adverb to describe the act of sensing.

Related Vocabulary
look- to have a particular appearance

That car looks expensive.

That car looks expensive.

sound- to give a particular impression when heard or read about

Your idea sounds brilliant.

Your idea sounds brilliant.

feel- to give a particular sensation or impression

This sweater feels soft.

This sweater feels soft.

smell- to have a particular smell

The kitchen smells wonderful.

The kitchen smells wonderful.

taste- to have a particular flavor

This soup tastes salty.

This soup tastes salty.

Dicread Project Team

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