Emotions such as fear, horror, disgust, etc. are not intrinsically unpleasant. |
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Emotions express the intimate personal measuring of what is happening in our social lives. |
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Emotions ran high as the 41-year-old mum married long-time love Reynaldo Serrant in the day room at Cookridge Hospital in Leeds, yesterday. |
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Emotions expressed by the patient or their family members should be acknowledged and legitimized. |
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Emotions are also more vulnerable to manipulation by marketers, since they are attuned to respond to novelty, and visual stimulus. |
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Emotions were running high and people might utter a few throwaway remarks but the general feeling is one of relief that he has gone. |
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Emotions of fear, anticipation, and excitement silenced the team, as they walked with pride and dignity through the campus halls. |
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Emotions flickered across Michelle's face as she listened to the conversation between the two brothers. |
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Emotions flickered across Mage's face before he once again spoke to his friend. |
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Emotions briefly flickered across his blue eyes as they gazed into hers, wide and astonished. |
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Emotions ran high in packed taverns and shebeens with some fans literally drowning their sorrows to get over the disappointment. |
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Emotions are the organized psychobiological responses linking physiological, cognitive, and motivational systems. |
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Emotions and feelings have a considerable influence on earth's material labors. |
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Emotions were simply physiological disturbances that could become attached over time to a wide range of different stimuli. |
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Emotions were running high and people were obviously worried about their jobs. |
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There is constant talk throughout the story of what our emotions really speak of, where they come from, and what they mean. |
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Emotions were stinted, lines were rushed, some of the acting was wooden. |
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A chart that is strong in water will be dominated by emotions and sensitivity. |
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There are times when these individuals have a desire to give vent to their emotions. |
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Only occasionally does he give vent to some of the emotions he has spent the past two years repressing. |
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Singers are allowed to give full vent to their emotions, with little stylization. |
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This is a safe way to vent your emotions without alienating your co-workers. |
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Just being able to vent out my emotions to Becky made me feel that much better. |
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Age regression was used to explore the perceived cause of symptoms, and abreaction of the associated emotions was encouraged. |
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All this takes place in quacks, of course, but the detailed character animation conveys a wide range of emotions. |
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That means stretching your mind and emotions and endurance to the limit and therefore getting stronger and stronger day by day. |
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It can stir up strong emotions from the first notes heard, driving even the coldest of people to warm their hearts. |
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But Tian has stressed that the key meaning the story has for him is the warmth of the emotions that it expresses. |
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He says that it wasn't until then that he felt able to fully share his emotions with women. |
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With Abba, we were dealing with emotions that had simmered and accreted for years. |
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It deals with envy and jealousy and how these emotions cause so much unnecessary suffering in our lives. |
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Eve gives into her emotions as her mind pictures Mason having his way with her daughter. |
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The emotions that most explain customer intentions to return to midscale hotels are comfort, welcomeness and security. |
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I am still burning with anger and rage and all that temper stuff of emotions! |
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Nine months ago, he had been put through a similar experience, and knew the emotions that came with such an ordeal. |
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He entered with a tray balanced on his hand, and when he looked up and saw us a rainbow of emotions crossed his face. |
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His vulnerability, his emotions are those of the wily and ingenuous country lawyer. |
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That weekend it was dreadful weather, it was wet, it was cold, it was windy, and that just made our emotions even more hard to bear. |
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More so as the theme revolves around the ubiquitous concept of rasa an Indian concept and ideology based on emotions. |
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The whipsawing emotions are something they tell you to expect, but it just doesn't prepare you for the actual experience. |
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We have come a long way from Freud's affect theory to viewing emotions as joining and integrating minds. |
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This volume argued that true religion resides in the heart, or the seat of affections, emotions, and inclinations. |
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Trying to bring her own emotions back under control, she nodded her head in affirmation. |
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Well, you know, the emotions are still raw in this city, even a couple of years later. |
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He stated that the raw feeling of the emotions that brought him to tears is what startled him the most. |
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Suddenly, the potential of reality TV and its raw emotions are revealed in this wonderful, bewitching, heart-warming documentary. |
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Reading about it obviously brought a lot of raw emotions and memories to the forefront of people's minds. |
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The emotions are so raw for so long that you wonder whether you can handle any kind of involvement. |
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These pieces were sharp and biting, making no apologies for being unedited and written on the fly while emotions are still raw. |
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Sara sighed and lowered her head in order to prevent Gabe from reading the emotions, which leaked out of her tired eyes. |
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Not for the first time, Monique was very glad that he could not read emotions like she could, or thoughts, like Lawrence. |
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He just surveyed me with those dark eyes that seemed to read my emotions, and kept on driving. |
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He laughed and looked at his plate, as if he was embarrassed for reading my emotions wrong. |
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He showed nothing in his jet black eyes, not that I was used to reading the emotions of birds. |
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Even if they can't speak another's language, they can still read their emotions. |
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She was reading his emotions, the ones that were bottled up inside without use. |
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She could not read the emotions and raised her hot fingers to trace the outline of her cheek. |
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In balance, these conflicting emotions equal a readiness to change that which one can and to accept that which one cannot change. |
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Art is a strong reaffirmation that people, wherever they are in the world and whatever they do to earn a living, share the same basic emotions. |
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Short-lived, transitory projects and the open exchange of ideas filters our emotions through an agile and razor sharp intelligence. |
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There is no doubt that this full exposure to experience incorporates involvement with pain, suffering, hardship, distress and agonised emotions. |
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Before your emotions run wild with your imagination, remember that you can't believe everything you hear. |
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The sound of what is being said is just as important as the words themselves in what is, in a sense, a dialogue between reason and emotions. |
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Sometimes, whenever we try bringing back the past in our presence, we fail as if our emotions have a will of their own. |
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I buried my face in Scott's chest and let go of all the repressed emotions that had been slowly killing me. |
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When volunteers pretended to feel one of these emotions, the computer recognized the emotion correctly 98 per cent of the time. |
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They ran through emotions from funny, romantic and sad, to witty, wistful and thought-provoking. |
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His aim, he explains in a program interview, is to reconnect music to emotions through narrative. |
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As unnerving as they may be, Fischer says nightmares are a useful and healthy response to trauma, as they reconnect us to our emotions. |
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And that comes off as things like withholding your emotions from other people. |
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Anthony Mackie is especially effective as the rock-solid center, masterfully withholding his emotions until just the right moment. |
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The three principal actors are thanked for creating wonderfully complex characters with real motivations and emotions. |
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The idea that women are real human beings with thoughts and emotions is played down. |
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He was just one of those good-hearted, woolly-minded men who were guided by emotions on everything. |
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Those are the facts, but they don't convey the emotions of this achievement, and I won't even try to put them into words. |
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Melinda, a mother-of-three, knows first-hand how emotions can spiral out of control after giving birth. |
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Try as I might to hide my emotions, it was tough not to be aghast at the scratching so close to my work surface. |
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He looked them over, awe and curiosity registering on his face before he skillfully masked his emotions. |
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She may be labile and inconsistent, expressing strong emotions of various types without any solid reason. |
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She almost seemed artificial, especially with how she kept a tight rein on her emotions, remaining perfectly in control at all times. |
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The film plays with the concepts of inner beauty and outer beauty, physical beauty and the beauty of true emotions. |
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In many ways, St Valentine's Day is an easy out, a way to express emotions without feeling vulnerable, or really any risk of rejection. |
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Word after word flowing from her, releasing the emotions she never allowed herself to show, because showing emotions was dangerous. |
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The mix of emotions on his face was so varied between anxiety, worry and relief, when he saw me breathing again. |
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It stirs up so many emotions which are still buried just beneath the surface, rather like the landmine that took my foot. |
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While she uses her own family, she sees their situation and her emotions as universal. |
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Boyhood's end is a short but dramatic work full of conflicting emotions and nostalgia for days of yore. |
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Their opinion was that negative emotions are more lateralized in the brain because they are associated with survival mechanisms. |
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While print may provide context, a photo leaves relatively little to our imagination and elicits emotions otherwise buffered by words. |
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Though they are not friends-Jarvis is a reserved man who does not display emotions easily-they help each other recover from their losses. |
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She had never seen him so happy before, he was always so reserved and cautious with his emotions. |
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And if androids really do resemble people eventually, then to make a reasonable decision in real time they will still need emotions. |
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The resonant emotions projected by the album render titles and lyrics unnecessary. |
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The emotions that the songs convey are generally ones that resonate with me. |
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It's strange how inanimate objects can resonate with different emotions depending on the situation in which they are viewed. |
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Christopher crumples to the ground, groans, expressing emotions in a physical, almost animal way, that most of us are incapable of. |
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He leavens his vision of the human slaughterhouse with emotions, but these nearly always lead to impasse, or compromise. |
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To be rid of these restless feelings and emotions, he need only take a few steps to the recreation room. |
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So our antecedent concern emerged with a new clarity in the emotions we experienced. |
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God also uses anthropopathy, or describes Himself in terms of human emotions such as love, grief or anger. |
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I watched most of this movie last night, revelling again in the grace, the vigorous fighting, the dreaminess, the repressed emotions. |
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They select those news reports that are consistent with their preferred thinking, especially those that fan national emotions. |
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See how feelings arise and how quickly we can associate them with any triggered emotions. |
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The theme Positive Emotionality was characterized by young fathers' positive expressions of emotions about their children. |
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Anger is one of those emotions whose expression is sometimes subject to taboos, so people can grow up unable to recognize it. |
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Our culture tends to block and suppress the healthy expression of deep emotions. |
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Chad had never been so gentle with a kiss, and yet he'd never felt such a riot of emotions at the same time. |
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He felt her nod beneath his cheek and he fought the rioting emotions inside him. |
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Once your child starts playgroup and you go back to work, your emotions may run riot. |
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Never have I listened to an album with such a range of emotions on top of such stirring music. |
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He shook his head, feeling stirrings of emotions he hadn't felt for too long. |
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The museum claimed to serve the cause of moral reformation, but it really worked on base emotions and bodily appetites. |
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The response is typically enhanced during aversive emotions and diminished during appetitive emotions. |
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As a writer I'm deeply apprised of the need to keep the words uncluttered of any urge to rouse easy emotions. |
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In linguistics, there are presently two main approaches to solving the problems associated with the description of emotions. |
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In the play, the robots, having acquired human emotions, rebel against their servile status and destroy their masters. |
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Evaluating irrational and arational decisions based on our emotions with mathematics may be impossible. |
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The notion that men aren't able to talk about their emotions is alien to me. |
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Indeed it suggests that Waugh was loading the dice in favor of Tony, manipulating his reader's emotions in a manner worthy of Wilde's Dickens. |
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Shaping impulses, recalls Platonic and Aristotelian reason's governing and guiding appetites and emotions. |
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He understood best how to play the emotions, but his contemporaries are impatient with an aesthetic of art for art's sake. |
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In turning the genre inside out, Godard creates a world in which real emotions resemble artifice. |
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The very sight of her roused such fond, nervous emotions and reassurance in him that he himself could hardly make sense of them. |
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Instead of rousing the readers' emotions by overt descriptions of violence, Visalam's novel concentrates more on the background to that violence. |
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I did not begin my degree as some sort of art therapy, I am a trained bereavement counsellor and I am very aware of my emotions. |
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Expression blank and thoughts and emotions carefully controlled, she loosened her tight hold upon her fan. |
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By using food to fix our draggy moods and low energy, we're letting our emotions rule our bodies, and we're getting fatter in the bargain. |
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I always seemed to let my emotions rule me and I couldn't follow my heart this time, because for once I didn't know what my heart wanted. |
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Essentially, nobody knew what was going on, and emotions were ruling some heads that should have been kept cooler. |
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The man was a rock, and never let his emotions rule what he said or how he acted or reacted. |
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Too often investors will let their emotions rule their investment decisions with disastrous results. |
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The moon, planet of emotions, is your ruler, making you extremely sensitive to the moods of others. |
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Tensions and emotions ran high as both gangs headed for the chosen rumble spot at the football field. |
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New emotions assailed her so strongly she dropped to her knees with a moan. |
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Is it a longing for lost youth, a remembrance of a time of discovery when emotions were running out of control? |
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I'm just a normal guy, got a job to do, and my emotions were all over the lot. |
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I think I'm letting my emotions run away with me on this one, and being just a little unfair. |
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February 14 is the one day in the year when you can really afford to let your emotions run away with you. |
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Channel those emotions as you read this, and send me all your love and sympathy. |
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As soon as I opened up my mind, I was knocked flat by a rush of emotions, mostly fear and anger. |
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She felt a rush of emotions with the anticipation of finding out what was in store for her. |
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The polling has indicated only lukewarm support, and that at a time when emotions about child murder are running exceptionally high. |
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Many who marry attempt to achieve a strong, enduring bond based primarily on emotions. |
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How organizations attend to a rich range of employees' emotions could facilitate or hinder the progress of ambitious change. |
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I like the songs that lyrically dissect opposing emotions and combine them within one song. |
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You search your innermost recesses and you examine the motivations and the emotions of the heart. |
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Those people who can freely put their inner most thoughts, feelings and emotions on the web I salute and send you my admiration. |
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Harden's Krasner is a maelstrom of emotions, lurching from admiration of her husband to fierce rage at his drunken womanising. |
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He is not a racialist, he can speak Tamil, and he knows the village scene and its characters well, and was not afraid to show his emotions. |
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While compassion makes us feel the richer for our magnanimity, justice stirs up far more complex emotions of self-justification and equivocation. |
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Her mind was a twisted and tangled web of emotions, changing every time she thought she liked someone. |
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Her music was neither primal punk nor introspective blues but a more complex tangle of emotions shared by both. |
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Moreover, if they are opposed, their religious feelings and emotions are awakened. |
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What many patients experience is an awakening of emotions which they have never had, rather than a repetition of phantasies from the past. |
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To negate these feelings, individuals who awfulize must learn to focus on internal feelings and apply logic over emotions. |
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As my husband continued his confession to me, I felt a volcano of emotions beginning to boil up. |
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I've always had a stubborn streak, but I've never let my emotions boil over like that before. |
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Its true nature is often obscured by strong emotions like anger and passion. |
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Within the context of modernity, the autonomous artist, as a creative being, explores varying moods, passion, sentiments and emotions. |
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When performed as Bach clearly intended and obviously felt, the Passion induces the most profound emotions that music can give. |
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Certainly, once our emotions landed back to earth, we felt we should have won the game by more. |
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Rather the ape had achieved its high status through intellect, the dog on account of highly developed emotions. |
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The film runs the gamut of emotions from tearful sickbed scenes to ruthless black comedy. |
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Patients with delirium may display a wide range of emotions, including anxiety, sadness or tearfulness, and euphoria. |
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In particular, it ignores those emotions which involve higher cognitive processes, such as jealousy, envy, and Schadenfreude. |
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Monkeys, like us, actively schematize their world, and their behavior is thus motivated by cognitions as well as emotions. |
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Juries are human, and can be easily swayed by the emotions of the case, and the clever manipulation of a strong barrister. |
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Grace sighed, silently counting backwards from ten, trying to suppress her emotions and giving herself a few moments to gather her thoughts. |
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There's plenty of research now which bears testament to the fact that our emotions can have far-reaching consequences for our physical health. |
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Two years ago he went there for the Seniors Open with his emotions scrambled. |
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The director lights up the screen with genuine emotions, minus sentimentality. |
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Both mastered the text superbly and the emotions that ran between the two actors kept the audience on the edge of their seats. |
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The rush of emotions and the intensity of being whooshed back to the time in my life when we were together screwed me up for weeks. |
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No one could have scripted the drama, excitement and emotions which swept over Hyde Park on Sunday afternoon. |
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If we theorize culture without considering the dynamics of fear or emotions, we naively underestimate the potential for social change. |
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Personality explores what it is that makes us who we are and uncovers the universal battle to master our emotions and control our behaviour. |
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I felt I could share with her the whole scope of emotions I was going through, and yet be my own master in the process. |
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Challenge your beliefs about the bad things that might happen if you show your emotions. |
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These heavy mineral substances tend to create more grounding sedative effects that help calm the mind and emotions. |
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It has to do with the basic human repertoire of emotions, cognitive capabilities and even longevity of life. |
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Best of all, his choreography speaks unabashedly from and to basic human emotions. |
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But most of all I'm getting thrills of emotions that I haven't felt for such a long time, that I'd almost forgotten. |
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Furthermore, he holds that certain primitive emotions influence action tendencies without the mediation of propositions or concepts. |
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If we're self-medicating, who decided to medicalise these emotions in the first place? |
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Modern conceptions of emotions, as we have seen, have been frequently couched in terms of other mental terms. |
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They did so by encouraging self-expression and imaginative play as well as the frank expression of emotions. |
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If showing our emotions leaves us feeling exposed and vulnerable, then why do it? |
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The house-building sector is the perfect battleground for these two emotions. |
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Two separate analyses indicate that spiritual healing is associated with positive emotions more often than negative emotions. |
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Some people weep and bawl, some just put on a brave face and try to go on instead of showing their emotions outwardly. |
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All normal human emotions atrophy except one, the instinct for self-preservation and, allied to it, the itch to tyrannise. |
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Regrettably, the debate is so laden with emotions and self-serving arguments that the facts are often overlooked. |
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Both herbs seem to have beneficial effect on the emotions, heart and for sadness, melancholy and sadness. |
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Staring back at her, by mouth gaping, a melange of confused emotions begin stewing up inside me. |
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I assumed the squealing tires belonged to him and I was hit with a tidal wave of super emotions. |
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What was outstanding was the way the entire film was knit together with enough play of emotions without becoming melodramatic. |
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Rocked by this dizzying mix of emotions, you walk a tightrope, balancing your own needs against those of your loved one. |
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As Karya's emotions flickered across her face, Aidan's lips were twitching. |
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Jamie smirked softly, watching the emotions flicker in Brian's wide blue eyes. |
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He shook off the feeling immediately and said quietly, the whole time carefully watching the emotions flickering across her face. |
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Timon pressed lightly, though his dark eyes watched her face carefully as emotions flickered across it. |
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It was in that moment that several emotions flickered across the young girl's face. |
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A thousand painful, confusing emotions flickered through her brain all at once and she pulled away from him sharply. |
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I watched the emotions flicker across his face, like a rainbow in a spray of water. |
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Areal watched her friend walk off, and then a flicker of emotions came over Dido's face when she turned to look at him. |
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You get small flickers of different emotions playing in our golden playboy's eyes so he's not stone cold after all. |
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A chamber that normally is a bear pit of partisan emotions was united in shock and sorrow. |
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Her whole body was tingling with the words he was speaking with such passion, such fierce emotions. |
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Natalia was struggling to contain herself, a torrent of emotions wanting to burst forth and unleash themselves with unrelenting mercilessness. |
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Like Karon's patient, they were often treated with hypnotic abreaction in which the patient was expected to re-live the moment of trauma with unrestrained emotions. |
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It was rather rude of me to try and force your emotions out of you. |
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You are so self-sufficient that your emotions are always controlled. |
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The men are angry and young, caught up in a maelstrom of emotions as they struggle to right a wrong, face down the established order and make their voices heard. |
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Your emotions are coming to a climax this month, dear Libran. |
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She manages to capture some of their innermost feelings, and shows that transsexuals have the same range of emotions and personalities as normal people. |
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Her mind was completely void of emotions and her body was rigid. |
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Partly, it may be a desire to quell emotions in front of strangers. |
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Beyond all the emotions, there are tangible benefits that can be accrued. |
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It's an enigmatic pastiche of emotions, accusals, and imagery. |
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Jumbled emotions, from considered melancholia to improvised celebration, are conveyed by the contrast between the sepia-toned photographs and their jazzily patterned borders. |
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I really enjoyed getting my head around the drama and the emotions. |
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In these tense hours emotions, tempers, and fears are running high. |
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Calm, however, is gradually giving way to more negative emotions. |
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But maybe the residual effect of the lockout stirred up some emotions. |
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Inside of the child, emotions stirred and the mind was incredibly active. |
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And I have to say that the constant histrionics and tantrums made a French workplace much more fun than the repressed emotions and silent back-stabbing of an English office. |
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If basic emotions like fear are mediated exclusively by the limbic system, the higher cognitive emotions such as love and guilt seem to involve much more cortical processing. |
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At this point many firms dissolve, sometime in a slow slide to failure, sometimes more dramatically in a maelstrom of big emotions and bad decisions. |
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He stood there, unsure of the emotions raging inside his head. |
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Her emotions raged, the strongest being not sadness, but anger. |
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This resembles the deadening of the emotions paradoxically required for the exquisitely heightened sensate perception in the Marquis de Sade's novels. |
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There was a pause, while Kara struggled to deal with her rioting emotions. |
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Jol had his emotions stirred by Sunday's memorial service for Nicholson, who guided Tottenham to their first league and cup double and unprecedented success in Europe. |
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Only recently have I really understood this and also understood when it's good to let those emotions rip and when to hold back and keep things balanced. |
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Mr. Rove, you make these claims purely as conjecture without any facts, fanned by the emotions of your partisanship. |
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The performances are excellent, with Spencer conveying the emotions and suffering Tony endures admirably and Rush, as his alcoholic, abusive father is wonderful. |
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It is an argument which appeals to the emotions rather than the intellect. |
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These appeals persuade not through the give-and-take of argument and debate, but through the manipulation of symbols and of our most basic human emotions. |
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I didn't want to hurt the guys because of my girly lovesick emotions. |
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When I did not hit, I had to respond to the first stirrings of my anger so that I did not respond when my emotions or my actions were out of control. |
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Thousands of emotions were rushing through my body a mile a minute. |
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Those same raw nerves, however, also spilled into every bar of the opera's music and also explain the torrential savagery of the emotions it recreates in the listener. |
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The moist emotions were at once staged for television and overpoweringly real. |
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We all know that in order to be fully prepared to appreciate the more elegant and refined of football experiences, one has to first rid oneself of one's negative emotions. |
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Some write more openly about their fears, apprehensions and emotions. |
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This preventative mental work, says Ekman, is different from Western conceptions of emotional control, where unpleasant emotions are considered almost inevitable. |
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It's sad when your emotions get tangled up so much in the web of love. |
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Sports bring out intense feelings sometimes and my raw emotions came out. |
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Her Scandinavian English is sharp, heavily accented, the grammar and syntax strange in some places, but the emotions are palpable, resonant, honest. |
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Popular music has the power to express and regulate our emotions. |
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It attempts to sensitize people to those emotions so they can be utilized to analyze and control the contingencies relevant to them and thereby to control these emotions. |
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No more will I worry or hide behind the mask of anger or neutral emotions. |
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Every time returning home demands a reorientation of body and emotions. |
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In the mid-nineteenth century, in keeping with the developments of scientific methods, stress was placed on controlling the body, sexuality, and emotions. |
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These emotions begin in his early diaries as a student on a Fulbright grant in London. |
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Difficulty making decisions, short and long term memory loss, insomnia, lingering fatigue, or an inability to control emotions. |
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I am thinking of awe, reverence, respect and emotions too deep for words. |
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On the tennis court I find it hard to keep my emotions together. |
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I looked up at him and watched the emotions flicker across his face. |
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That's right, though the Founding Fathers were always worried about localist emotions taking over a political process that they believed should be rational-legal. |
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The good news is that once you master your emotions, you can gain an edge. |
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On Sunday evening as the mist fell on Hyde Park, delirious supporters gave vent to their emotions as they cheered the new kings of Roscommon football. |
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When the lonely bagpipe finally plays a somber song for either entity, its wraithlike warble filling the air with all manner of mixed emotions, it will not be a celebration. |
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She charged Brandon with keeping his emotions bottled up, and Danielle with failing to give him opportunities to vent. |
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There is a great deal of humor that keeps the tale from becoming too saccharine or maudlin, but the heavy pull at the heart and the emotions cannot be denied. |
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We know that many homicides are the end result of passionate emotions and those emotions are socially situated and gendered. |
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He looked at her, eyes awhirl with emotions and face stonily blank. |
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Cognitive approaches to this problem have to grapple with how one cognizes reality and how one cognizes the emotions that result from the experience of that reality. |
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The novel is a near perfect portrayal of the emotions of a young girl on the cusp of womanhood. |
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Events such as Bangalore Habba kindle the emotions of people, she added. |
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The witnesses were used in the worst possible way, as a sort of subterfuge to play on emotions. |
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Apart from its balletic set-pieces of gunfights, the film ran a gauntlet of emotions from violent excitement to melodramatics to softhearted sentimentality. |
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Natural Born Heroes also reveals how the anatomy of the human face is unique in the animal kingdom and can show an extraordinary range of emotions. |
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Quite often what happens is that young men are relatively unaware of their emotions until something goes wrong and then very often they don't know what hit them. |
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Morgan watched discreetly as different emotions flickered across her face. |
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Despite the gust of excitement most scientists are keeping their emotions in check. |
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The Romney campaign wooed those voters by deferring to some of their emotions. |
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They're supposed to give audiences hope and enlighten them while promoting positive emotions. |
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That's why, dare I say, the anchorperson has always got to stand back, even at the risk of seeming a little cold-blooded at times, so as not to impose our emotions on others. |
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See Fareed Zakaria's column, for a fine example of the interplay of these contending emotions. |
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As the language of personal development lands on their business laps, managers learn the sequence of emotions and reactions associated with change. |
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The high emotions of the night didn't compare to the passion displayed in this song, as Oberst lowered himself down on stage and sang from his knees. |
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Emotions run high as Adele is still lying unconscious in intensive care and a guilt-ridden Fletch faces his demons. |
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Emotions once suppressed, emotions once channeled, now are let loose. |
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Katherine is still afraid of allowing her emotions to run away with her. |
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You go through the same emotions and questions over and over, and talk with your friends about the same topics because you cannot seem to make a decision. |
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I felt mixed emotions when I learned of the capture of Ivory Coast President Laurent Gbagbo in Abidjan on Monday. |
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Passion seems to be repressed in Linda, who prefers control to stirred emotions, and who thinks that being ruled by passion goes against everything she stands for. |
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Goetz clearly has conflicting thoughts and emotions about his own case, the Zimmerman case, and any attempt to compare the two. |
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Faith had been watching the conflicting emotions flicker over his face. |
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Facialist Aida Bacaj, who tends to the pores of Kyra Sedgwick and Carla Gugino, has mixed emotions. |
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Many patients buried their emotions, utterly helpless and dependent as they were, for the sake of peace, maintaining an outer stoicism they did not feel. |
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Yet increasingly we are finding out that the state of our mind, emotions, and spirit have a significant impact on both our health and our recovery when illness strikes. |
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One limbic structure affected by this early maldevelopment is the amygdala, which generates emotions like fear. |
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When he finally did reach the doorway he stood in it, glancing back at the room of his child, overcome with emotions of pride, fear, hope, happiness and also, loneliness. |
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Lain's eyes completely washed over with emotions and for some reason it pained her physically for she had never ever felt any kind of emotions but anger. |
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The tightly controlled choreography stirred the emotions while celebrating the unsung heroes of the backroom. |
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Based on careful observations, Darwin contended that many animals possess general concepts, some reasoning ability, rudiments of moral sentiments, and complex emotions. |
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Her characters are two-dimensional with no shading, nuance, or mixed emotions. |
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But, however much a book is heralded as a brilliant work by an acclaimed author, there is not much joy in reading it when the main character is a glut of negative emotions. |
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