Tangibility
Group: 4 #group-4
Relations
- Substantial: Tangible objects have substance and are not insubstantial or immaterial.
- Concretization: Tangibility is the quality of being concrete, physical, or capable of being perceived by the senses.
- Objective: Tangible things are objective and exist independently of subjective perception.
- Material: Tangibility is associated with material objects that have physical substance.
- Empirical: Tangibility is related to empirical knowledge, which is based on observable and measurable evidence.
- Corporeal: Tangibility is related to the corporeal, which refers to having a physical or material body.
- Perceptible: Tangible things are perceptible, meaning they can be perceived by the senses.
- Tactile: Tangibility is associated with the tactile sense, which allows us to perceive and experience tangible objects.
- Manifest: Tangibility is associated with things that are manifest and clearly apparent in the physical world.
- Concrete Existence: Tangibility implies a concrete existence in the physical world, as opposed to an abstract or conceptual existence.
- Embodied: Tangible objects are embodied, meaning they have a physical form or body.
- Palpable: Tangible things are palpable, meaning they can be perceived by the sense of touch.
- Embodiment: Embodiment is the quality or state of being tangible or having a physical, concrete form that can be perceived and interacted with.
- Concrete: Tangible things are concrete and material, as opposed to abstract or intangible.
- Materiality: Tangibility is closely related to materiality, which refers to the state of being composed of matter.
- Measurable: Tangible objects can be measured and quantified, as they have physical properties.
- Touchable: Tangible objects can be touched and felt, making them touchable.
- Physical Reality: Tangibility refers to the quality of being physically real and having a concrete existence.
- Tangible Assets: In accounting and finance, tangible assets are physical assets that have a material form.
- Physical Form: Physical forms are tangible, meaning they can be perceived by the sense of touch.
- Sensory Experience: Tangible objects can be experienced through the senses, particularly touch.
- Physicality: Tangibility is associated with physicality, which refers to the physical or material aspects of something.