Home

sentido

Sentido is a versatile noun in Spanish and Portuguese that covers a range of related concepts centered on perception, interpretation, direction, and purpose. It derives from Latin sensus, from the verb sentire “to feel,” and over time has accumulated several closely linked meanings.

In everyday use, sentido can refer to sensory perception (los sentidos). It also denotes direction or orientation,

Sentido also encompasses intention or purpose, such as when someone acts “con un sentido” de finalidad. In

In Portuguese, as in Spanish, sentido retains these varied uses, with some region-specific nuances. Phrases such

as
in
hablar
de
“el
sentido
de
la
marcha”
or
“sentido
norte,”
and
in
traffic
signage
where
“sentido
único”
indicates
a
one-way
direction.
It
also
expresses
meaning
or
interpretation:
“el
sentido
de
una
frase”
or
“el
sentido
de
un
texto,”
where
it
contrasts
with
significado,
the
literal
or
denotative
meaning.
The
phrase
“sentido
figurado”
contrasts
with
“sentido
literal.”
Practical
or
pragmatic
uses
include
“sentido
común”
(common
sense)
and
“sentido
práctico.”
philosophy
and
linguistics,
the
expression
sentido
y
referencia
describes
the
distinction
between
the
sense
of
a
term
(its
cognitive
content)
and
its
reference
(the
object
it
stands
for),
a
framework
widely
discussed
in
the
Spanish-speaking
literature
on
semantics.
as
“sentido
de
humor,”
“sentido
de
la
vida,”
or
“hacer
sentido”
appear
across
contexts,
illustrating
the
word’s
flexibility
in
describing
perception,
interpretation,
orientation,
and
intention.