Naturally, I'll experience a twinge of envy as employed friends brag about their party excesses. |
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The pregnant person scrutinizes every bellyache and back twinge to see if it's a sign of the impending big event. |
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The tiny minority upset me when they feel they can't attend work because of a sniffle or a twinge. |
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Fiora's face was splotched with angry red spots, but a twinge of hurt somehow found its way into her enraged voice. |
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The thought brought fear and a twinge of panic as Christopher scrubbed at his scalp. |
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Casey's right elbow hit something solid and she bit her lip, feeling the nerve in her arm, her funny bone, twinge. |
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He flexed tired fingers and massaged his arm, then flinched at a twinge of pain in his chest. |
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He woke to a rap on the door and a flood of sunlight that caused his forehead to twinge in pain. |
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She rolled over onto her back and stretched, feeling the muscles in her arms and legs twinge in pain. |
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As Gretchen elaborated, Ikiri felt a surge of anger, jealousy, and a twinge of loss. |
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Rebecca experienced a brief twinge of embarrassment as she wondered just what her children had seen if anything. |
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She felt no remorse, not even the tiniest twinge of guilt for what she had just done. |
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Rather than defining genres, Skinner explores them, intersecting garage and hip-hop with rave, reggae, and even a twinge of bedsit indie. |
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He felt a twinge underneath the bone while pushing off out of the batter's box and running to first. |
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A twinge of disappointment colored her happiness as she remembered her parents wouldn't be sharing in that wonderful moment. |
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Those brought up in the punk rock era will have a twinge of nostalgia for the days when it was a badge of honour to be gobbed on by your idols. |
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It took months for me to recover, and still today there's a twinge in my pelvis at times. |
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I felt a twinge of jealousy and anger, I rarely got jealous over things mostly because half the time I didn't care. |
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There was a twinge of regret inside of her, but she quickly chewed on a mouthful of salad to take her mind off of things. |
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Winter was over but there was room for a twinge of regret, it seemed to me, and a little mournful Polish fatalism. |
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There was a brief twinge of pain as she squeezed a sleeper through the needle hole. |
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A sharp twinge of pain caused him to take in a hissing breath in an effort to resist temptation of crying out as she found the spot. |
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While he was thinking of a way to entertain himself, he suddenly felt a small twinge of pain in his head. |
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Shortly after the three of us set upon his dorm room to dismantle it, a small but sharp twinge of pain registered just under my left kneecap. |
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Lee laughed aloud, and then held his side, as the laughter caused his side to flare in a sharp twinge of pain. |
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When I came upon the deli, its sign glowing like a beacon in the brumous night, a slight twinge of anticipation quickened my pace. |
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A sharp twinge of agony shot up her left arm, reaching her shoulder and spreading through her entire chest. |
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She felt a twinge of jealousy wondering if he was the same way with Mia and she couldn't help but long for a man like Blake. |
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The sharp twinge of pain combined with suddenly rising to his feet must have induced a vasovagal attack. |
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Then at 65m, far out in front of the field, a sudden twinge tickles his thigh. |
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I snapped my attention back to my friends and felt a twinge of annoyance after hearing Drew's speech. |
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In reality, however, it's a courtroom drama with a twinge of the supernatural. |
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Lauren smiled at her friend and felt a twinge of jealousy at the same time. |
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The plane stopped off in Thailand, when I suddenly became overwhelmed with a wave of curiosity and maybe just a twinge of compassion. |
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They have made even the hardest-hearted of us feel a twinge of pity where few of us expected to find one. |
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Climbing its slopes, with a twinge of excitement I spot an encampment of black tents set in the fold of a green glen. |
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I look forward to her future with uncertainty, I look to her past with a twinge of nostalgia. |
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When you return to the street, you'll look around and feel a twinge of homesickness. |
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Blair reached up to the overhead to retrieve his pack, and a twinge of remembered pain clutched his chest. |
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However, she felt a twinge of disappointment when she couldn't see him. |
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Landing hard she ignored the twinge that shot up her leg, stumbling past the daemon to the control platform and shoving the wheel around to fully open the floodgate. |
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Cuddling into his warmth, she allowed her eyes to close as her anger ebbed until it faded completely, leaving a small twinge of guilt in its wake. |
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I always wait to read them until Jon gets home, and then I usually read it aloud in a deep, low, gravelly voice with a twinge of a Southern accent, since he's in Texas. |
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She could still feel the wrinkled skin of her fingers from the apple's juice and the dull twinge of pain that penetrated every muscle in her back. |
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I hate to feel even a mild twinge of anxiety when walking into a public bathroom. |
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Far out over the Atlantic, as you approach Greenland, a twinge of conscience hits you. |
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I can't remember the smallest twinge of conscience at the deflated faces of the boys I betrayed. |
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It seems silly to write about it now, but when I got back in the van with Grant I felt a twinge of conscience. |
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There would be some twinge of conscience that would cause them to feel that regret. |
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The pain of sensitive teeth feels like a short, sharp twinge or stab of pain. |
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It was not a blind, stabbing pain, but just a throb and a twinge. |
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And I can't deny the twinge of pride I felt each time the smiley face appeared – perhaps the age of the adult star chart really is upon us. |
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They also note with a twinge of pride that Mr Mugabe has squandered a beneficent colonial economic legacy. |
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Kiriam felt a sudden twinge of nervousness as the man levelled his gaze at her again. |
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Shamata, that twinge of joy for someone else's sorrow, is what much of the world seems to feel about Dubai's financial fall to earth. |
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But he acknowledges a twinge of regret during the newsroom announcement Thursday. |
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Watching a big hit on a player now comes with the same twinge of guilt as watching clips of Muhammad Ali being pummelled. |
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It is therefore with a twinge of sorrow that I declare the session of the European Parliament adjourned. |
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That day she and her husband were busy and suddenly she felt a twinge of discomfort. |
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I can only try to imagine what it was like and when I do, I get a twinge of pain with every thought. |
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If you feel a twinge of pain, lightly stretch your back muscles, treat yourself to a massage, and apply heat. |
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Dry skin causes a twinge of discomfort and roughness and can affect almost everyone, at any age, to varying degrees. |
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It is with a twinge of sorrow that Hélène Tremblay is leaving her position as consultant for the Education-Animation service. |
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The patient often describes it like a twinge, burning or a tingling which become worse with the activity. |
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You feel the twinge of a sore throat and your muscles and joints are aching. |
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But it's with a twinge of sorrow that these two generations move into their new home: they now have half the space. |
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A slight twinge can be felt when consuming cold, hot or sweet foods or drinks. |
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If you don't feel a twinge of nostalgia when you look at the pictures then you might get bored quickly. |
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There is something about a person who has the integrity to live as they profess to believe that never fails to spark at least a faint twinge of admiration. |
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What Rock created, then, is a twinge of nostalgia for a twinge of nostalgia. |
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They no doubt felt a twinge of satisfaction but it could only have been momentary. |
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Halfway through the day I turned my head and felt a sudden twinge of pain. |
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The side of my face gave a sharp twinge of pain, but I pushed that aside. |
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Then we began hugging everyone in sight but still we all were feeling a twinge of sadness being unable to hug all our friends and family back home. |
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No matter how much we all like to pretend we've grown out of Christmas, there is still a twinge of excitement associated with the unwrapping of any present. |
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Still not experiencing a twinge of fear, she eyed the man up and down. |
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Kandynce remained where she was and evidenced not a twinge of self-pity. |
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She did not use an app like Gripe to frictionlessly send out a complaint to her million Twitter followers at the first twinge of irritation. |
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But a twinge of conscience, or a twist of pain at the memory of those misdeeds which drove him from America in the first place, won't let him kill. |
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Impossibly, even through thick glass, I felt a twinge of vertigo. |
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Canadian Lombardo admits there will be a twinge of mixed feelings as his Italian heritage means he will be trying to beat the team he usually loves to see win. |
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The 33-year-old might just be starting to feel a twinge of anxiety, though, as he prepares to be reacquainted with some familiar faces from the Spanish Liga. |
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The Assembly disbanded with a collective twinge about whether enough had been accomplished over the two days to justify the venture, but a strengthened sense of commitment was evident. |
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The two Gordon setters came obediently to heel. Sir Oswald Feiling winced as he turned to go home. He had felt a warning twinge of lumbago. |
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I wonder, as you go to place that embryo in a disposal container of some sort, if you would for a moment feel some hesitation about doing that, or perhaps you would feel a twinge of regret at having to do that. |
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But his leaving is not without a little twinge of sorrow. |
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It is with a twinge of regret that I am telling you that today is the last day of work at the table for one of our most esteemed clerks, Camille Montpetit. |
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He has a point. It is hard not to feel a twinge of sympathy for Mr Romney. |
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In fact, the Krom has impressed me so much that, as I sit here writing this on the evening of my last day with the gawky top-trim cube, I can't help but feel more than a twinge sadness at the prospect of giving it up. |
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As I mentioned before, and I do not know if I said it very well, if a lab technician were asked to dispose of a human embryo would there not be a twinge of conscience there? |
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As I hailed a cab, I felt a twinge of conscience at my slightly operatic escape and wondered, a bit guiltily, whether he would be able to get dinner on the table fast enough to keep our son from melting down. |
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Instead of relishing that little twinge in your nose you know is going to be followed by a full-on sternutation, I wince at the pain that is going to come. |
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Scyphozoan jellyfish stings range from a twinge to tingling to agony. |
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I still feel an occasional twinge in my leg from the accident. |
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