highly sensitive
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
- Adjective:
- Extremely responsive or reactive: Describes something that is easily affected, influenced, or changed by a specific agent, condition, or stimulus. It often implies a low threshold for reaction.
- Easily detecting or registering small changes: Describes instruments, materials, or biological systems that can perceive minute differences or signals.
Usage Examples
- Adjective:
- The laboratory uses a highly sensitive scale to measure minute changes in weight.
- Her skin is highly sensitive to sunlight, so she must wear strong sunscreen.
- The negotiations are highly sensitive to political developments in the region.
Advanced Usage
- Scientific/Technical Context: Often used to describe equipment, chemicals, or biological traits.
- The new sensor is highly sensitive to temperature fluctuations.
- Emotional/Personal Context: Can describe a person who is very perceptive or easily affected emotionally, though this is a contextual extension of the core meaning.
- He is highly sensitive to criticism.
Variants and Related Words
- Sensitivity (n): The quality or state of being sensitive.
- The sensitivity of the device is remarkable.
- Hypersensitive (adj): Having abnormally high sensitivity; often used in medical or critical contexts.
- He is hypersensitive to pollen.
Synonyms
- Acute: Extremely sharp or perceptive.
- Reactive: Tending to react readily.
- Responsive: Quick to respond or react.
Antonyms
- Insensitive: Not responsive to physical or emotional stimuli.
- Impervious: Not affected or influenced by something.
Related Phrases
- Highly sensitive to: The most common construction, followed by the agent of effect (e.g., light, pressure, opinion).
- The film is highly sensitive to light.
- Of high sensitivity: A more formal variant, often used in technical descriptions.
- This is a microphone of high sensitivity.
Adjective
- readily affected by various agents
- a highly sensitive explosive is easily exploded by a shock
- a sensitive colloid is readily coagulated