sensely

Etymology
From.

Adjective

 * Of, pertaining to, or perceived by sense or the senses; sensory; sensual; sensible.
 * 1) * 1871, The London Quarterly and Holborn Review - Volume 35 - Page 476:
 * a double I, a spiritual and a bodily. The spiritual I moves and hovers over the animal. The two are at war in a man ; and only by the mortification and death of every sensual or sensely desire can man attain to the ceasing of that connection
 * 1) * 1871, The London Quarterly and Holborn Review - Volume 35 - Page 476:
 * a double I, a spiritual and a bodily. The spiritual I moves and hovers over the animal. The two are at war in a man ; and only by the mortification and death of every sensual or sensely desire can man attain to the ceasing of that connection

Adverb

 * 1) In a sensely manner; sensorily; sensibly
 * 2) * 1970, The Spring Anthology:
 * Voice is in soundlessness contained; will too reposed to strike an active note: the floating mote more sensely seems than does the dormant nerve — no force, no verve; the body heaveless, prone.