The rhapsodic pleasures of her earlier work are alloyed here by a distinctive moral register, a pang of loss and imminent threat. |
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Sometimes Sara looks at Sarah's school friends and feels a pang of jealousy, of anger. |
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It is very handy having a pub next door, but I felt a pang of guilt as I popped in to the real Village Pub for a pint. |
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Dan felt a pang of concern for his wingmate, who sounded much less than her usually confident self. |
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I will feel a pang of homesickness when I think of them all around the dinner table together. |
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All we will feel is a pang of regret for the times when sport seemed such good company, giving us so many pleasures. |
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The thought sank into her and brought her senses to life, and Alli felt a sudden pang of guilt and panic strike her. |
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She twisted around to try and see the damage he had done and was rewarded with a sharp pang of pain. |
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A sudden pang of pain hit my chest, and I held onto it trying to ease the pain. |
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I played the nocturne in a loop, and I felt a pang of remembrance course through my whole person. |
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Though one realises with a pang, that these smiles contained in themselves a volcano of torment and angst. |
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The prose is strewn with biblical and poetic tags and pang full of rhetorical devices. |
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A father watching his daughter comb her brother's hair experiences a momentary pang of pure happiness. |
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He felt a pang of hurt and shock, to think that his sis, the one person he could always trust, wouldn't tell him when the wake was. |
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Joey felt a pang of hurt at the mention of Lauren's name, but she contained herself. |
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The pang in my belly coaxed me inside to see what their table had to offer. |
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As we wipe away the smudges of the last chocolate Easter egg, a pang of guilt associated with overindulgence might raise its head. |
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Rose wondered, listening to Yashi's soft, mellifluous voice soothing Jess, and feeling a pang of annoyance that she'd gone straight for him. |
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The coach, if not his players, can be excused for experiencing a pang of apprehension. |
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All that said, who could not feel more than a pang of nostalgia for the seventies when watching the documentary? |
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She felt another pang in her heart and realised she missed her parents terribly. |
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Elsie didn't feel sad at those words, nor did she feel a pang of hurt. |
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She quickly squashed the small pang of jealousy that had risen up in her. |
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The provincial judge was pang full of ministerial influence. |
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When I got the length of Mr Anthony's street, it was pang full of people. |
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With a pang and a ping and a scrunch not unlike the sensation you get when a tooth is pulled, the glass shattered the moment the tensioning springs were released. |
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So am I being a hypocrite running people over in my virtual car without a pang of remorse? |
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But doesn't Dickens feel a pang of guilt each time he sees the running of the paramedics towards one of his customers? |
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Nobody had told Karan's grandmother about his resits, and for the first time he felt a pang of guilt. |
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As I sat reading in bed, I heard the solitary pop of an early firework and had a momentary pang for familiar faces and a glass of fizz. |
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I felt a pang of sadness, then realized that it had become your city, and that Al-Hariri was looking to the future. |
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His great pang in Montmartre was the Russian poet, and legendary beauty, Anna Akhmatova. |
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Certainly, school bags are heavy these days and I often feel a pang when I see my willowy 12-year-old daughter shouldering her heavy bag as she trudges off to school. |
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It evokes a reflexive pang of parental solicitude in the reader. |
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I suddenly felt a sharp pang of pain thrust through my stomach. |
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Charlie's frequent bed-hopping was a strange thing to be hurt by, but every time he did this, Evander felt that pang of pain and disappointment that he never showed. |
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It is impossible to watch the 'fillers' at work without feeling a pang of envy for their toughness. |
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Viewers catching up with The Julian Assange Show may now experience a reality-TV buzz followed by a pang of anxiety. |
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Then in the end, he everytime pang seh me and disappear during working hours. In the end, I have to clear a lot of work for him instead. |
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But checking the headlines from home I felt a keen pang of homesickness when reading a series of news reports discussing the slow demise of the British zebra crossing. |
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Again pang seh after I buy tickets to movie. I never ask her to come again. |
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God pricketh them of his great goodness still. And the grief of this great pang pincheth them at the heart, and of wickedness they wry away. |
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As he moved into view, he must have felt a pang of anxiety, even fear. |
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This was essentially a version of Rice's birth pang theory, according to which the road to new life passed through death. |
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If you suddenly get a pang of do-goodism feelings, chalk it up to the energy of the cosmos and do what your heart compels. |
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And however infinitesimal their struggles must retroactively have felt in the light of her story, there will have been that acute pang of fellow feeling, of sympathy in its purest sense. |
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I feel disburdened, I feel good, I feel like Samson awakening to the fact that the shackles have fallen from him, but the relief is necessarily tempered by a pang of nostalgia. |
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This mild-tempered woman, we realize with a pang, is paralyzed in her own way — she's hopelessly in love with her man even though he finds her a little dull. |
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Does the member not feel a certain pang of regret that this is a confidence motion whereby, if people support it, there will be no guarantee that the poverty study, which is just beginning, will take place again? |
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We are called upon to partake the same feelings as those in the Heart of Christ, which had felt a pang for these crowds in seeing them like a flock without a shepherd. |
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So the Nightingale pressed closer against the thorn, and the thorn touched her heart, and a fierce pang of pain shot through her. |
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I think he knows this, and is revising his campaign accordingly. Here is an abridged extract from the column The danger for the president lies among wavering voters who think of 2008 with a pang of disappointment. |
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Richard is portrayed as suffering a pang of conscience, but as he speaks he regains his confidence and asserts that he will be evil, if such needed to retain his crown. |
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He was startled with a piece of information which gave him such an exquisite pang of delight that he could hardly keep the usual quiet of his demeanor. |
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