Sense organs

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Possible Answers: EARS.

Last seen on: The Telegraph – Quick Crossword – Aug 29 2018

Random information on the term “Sense organs”:

Hunger and satiety are sensations. Hunger represents the physiological need to eat food. Satiety is the absence of hunger; it is the sensation of feeling full.[1]

Appetite is another sensation experienced with eating; it is the desire to eat food. There are several theories about how the feeling of hunger arises. A healthy, well-nourished individual can survive for weeks without food intake, with claims ranging from three to ten weeks.[2][3] The sensation of hunger typically manifests after only a few hours without eating and is generally considered to be unpleasant. Satiety occurs between 5 and 20 minutes after eating.[4]

Hunger is also the most commonly used term to describe the condition of people who suffer from a chronic lack of sufficient food and constantly or frequently experience the sensation of hunger.

When hunger contractions start to occur in the stomach, they are informally referred to as hunger pangs. Hunger pangs usually do not begin until 12 to 24 hours after the last ingestion of food. A single hunger contraction lasts about 30 seconds, and pangs continue for around 30 to 45 minutes, then hunger subsides for around 30 to 150 minutes.[5] Individual contractions are separated at first, but are almost continuous after a certain amount of time.[5] Emotional states (anger, joy etc.) may inhibit hunger contractions.[5] Levels of hunger are increased by lower blood sugar levels, and are higher in diabetics.[5] They reach their greatest intensity in three to four days and may weaken in the succeeding days,[citation needed] although research suggests that hunger never disappears.[6] Hunger contractions are most intense in young, healthy people who have high degrees of gastrointestinal tonus. Periods between contractions increase with old age.[5]

Sense organs on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “EARS”:

The Gate of the Ears (Spanish: Arco de las Orejas), also known as the Arc of the Ears or Bib-Arrambla Gate. The gate was a city gate used as entrance to the city of Granada (Andalusia, Spain). The gate was located at the corners of Plaza de Bib-Rambla and Calle Salamanca.

The construction of the gate began in the 11th century. During the 19th century, it became the subject of several major controversies, and in 1884 it was demolished.

According to documents in the Chancillería de Granada’s archives, there was another gate nearby called the Puerta Real. To keep citizens in line, decapitated heads were hung on the gates of Elvira (Granada, Spain).

In 1935, Torres Balbás used the remains of the Gate of the Ears to create an arch in the Forest of the Alhambra. This arch and a small gate at the beginning of Plaza de Bib-Rambla are the only vestiges of its former state.

One popular theory suggests that the gate’s name is linked to the Andalusian tradition of taking ears and other body parts of executed criminals, and hanging them for display. Another theory suggests that during the reign of Philip IV of Spain, a floating tablao carrying too many people had sunk. The ears of the dead women were mutilated in an effort to remove their earrings, giving the Gate of the Ears its name.[1]

EARS on Wikipedia