Had my father lived, he might have sought my advice the way Nancy's seeks hers, confiding his conflicts in private, in his den. |
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The low-key manner is analytical, confiding, with a touch of the dosshouse philosopher engrossed in offbeat speculation. |
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Your cousin clearly didn't understand that, by confiding in you, she was making you a party to her guilty secret. |
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Clients must feel secure in confiding their secrets and entrusting their most personal affairs to lawyers. |
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After a fifteen-minute break, we went around the room confiding why each of us was there and what we wanted to write about. |
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I don't really feel close enough to either Jo or Lee to be comfortable with confiding in them. |
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But I would suggest talking calmly to your wife in private and confiding your feelings before you do anything else. |
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The letters she apparently sent Lord reveal her at her most playful, alternately teasing and confiding. |
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Respondents may be more comfortable confiding in others close to their own age and experience. |
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Seeking the support of people you feel comfortable confiding in may help to reduce feelings of isolation and may also lead to offers of help. |
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It consists in confiding a child to a member of the extended family, to a friend or even a friend of the parents. |
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It means arriving gradually at speaking with Him, confiding in Him one's own inner world: joys, sufferings, questions. |
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Often, confiding in another person helps you to see a situation in a new light. |
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Most of our customers have been confiding in our knowledge and expertise for many years. |
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If midwives jump in and act on confessions, pregnant women are likely to clam up, become reticent about confiding in them or even leave antenatal care. |
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An open microphone caught him confiding to the pope as he prepared to hurry away. |
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She will likely feel shame about what has happened, which may prevent her from confiding in anyone. |
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Olivier's Richard is the charismatic antihero who, confiding directly in you as the viewer, makes you complicit in his plots and crimes. |
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Usually she has the decency to lay low, occasionally confiding obnoxious sanctimoniousness at dinner parties. |
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Best recalls a grieving father confiding that a visit let him unlock the emotional door trapping his family in grief. |
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In the garden a statue represents Therese confiding in her father her desire to enter Carmel when she was 15 years old. |
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The mobile unit allows contact with people afraid of going to a doctor to deal with their problems and confiding in them. |
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Daughters and sons feel equally at ease confiding in their mothers, but daughters confide less in their fathers than sons. |
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Tough as it may be to conjure, even dentists report that their patients are confiding when their mouths are unencumbered. |
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Our long association has taught me that confiding in others allays pain. |
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And more than one-in-four children who took part in the survey also said they worried about being badly treated at home, even if they were confiding their worries to parents. |
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As far back as September, he was confiding to visitors that he was longing for a life of theological reflection and prayer nd weary of high ecclesiastical politics. |
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He compounded the mess by confiding to a journalist that the markets had misinterpreted him. Though serious, that setback proved short-lived and the chairman's reputation has steadily risen since last summer. |
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In fact, because of this latest attempt at social engineering they are confiding in me that never again will they support a party that has so little respect for democracy. |
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Lobo Antunes, who admires Faulkner, shares his partiality for overlapping monologues, which gives the impression that an entire society is incautiously confiding in an analyst or a confessor. |
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He accepted, though confiding to his diary that he could not think of a good novelist since Walter Scott who had done so. |
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Police officers have a lot of trouble confiding in me that they were involved in a shooting and that despite this, they're still called meatheads or pigs out in the streets. |
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This is a phobia called thanatophobia and you may find that confiding in your doctor will be helpful and you can also discuss your worries with your priest. |
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They've developed a very confiding relationship over the years. |
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