All this variability can leave you feeling part introvert, part extrovert, part ambivert. |
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Yet financialism can leave voters feeling queasy, and candidates grasping for answers. |
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Nitrous oxide, otherwise known as laughing gas, gives one an exhilarating feeling while operating as an anesthetic. |
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I really looked at it very carefully, and my feeling is that it has to be ambiguous. |
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Heroin users describe the high as a feeling of all-encompassing well being. |
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Chris Christie may be feeling a little bit lighter today, though it's unlikely he would ever admit it. |
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Fatima says they were initially happy when Ziad joined the army, but that feeling has utterly faded. |
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In the last decade or so of his life, Lewis gave up being an apologist, feeling he had lost his knack. |
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They form a separate unit, one that is autobiographical in feeling, though not, sometimes, entirely so in fact. |
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For anyone feeling guilty from eating all that salmon, you can sign up for the AK Salmon Runs road race on the second day. |
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You must be feeling awful. I went through something similar myself last year, so I can relate. |
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That act forever sealed his feeling for the Chief, bound it up with the war, with violence, with the gun. |
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Anger often manifests in withholders as another self-destructive but more socially acceptable feeling or behavior, like anxiety. |
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Within a few swipes, I was already feeling that burst of romantic optimism you need the first day of the new year. |
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Something like fluoride, which is too small for normal filters, yanks away that feeling of agency. |
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She wanted more from him, some acknowledgment of feeling, but he gave her nothing. |
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Amin, whom we met in the park, says that his highs tend to extend and intensify whatever he was feeling already. |
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He can come back to work when he's feeling better, but meanwhile he should be resting as much as possible. |
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The sense of insecurity is heightened by the uncertainty and a feeling of abandonment. |
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There is a tone of solemn and sacred feeling that blends with our conviviality. |
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The hot, blowsy country, remote from danger, had a lonely, forgotten feeling. |
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Maybe some shoppers will look at the store and be turned off by the boutiquey feeling, and they won't wander inside. |
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Still feeling the buzz from the coffee, he pushed through the last of the homework. |
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During the 2 minutes of music, students first PAUSE to check in with how they are feeling. |
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I have the feeling that even while the clock is ticking we are moving on to terrible things. |
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You couldn't help feeling he'd be caught out one day, and then what an almighty cropper he'd come! |
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Even I have communifaked few times and I admit sometimes it was just the feeling of insecurity. |
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They take the medication when they are not feeling well and some take the medication everyday but they don't condomize. |
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International necessities are rapidly breaking down old prejudices and conservatisms, while developing cosmopolite feeling. |
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She was feeling kind of crampish, so she went downstairs to lie down until dinner time. |
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A worm finds what it searches after only by feeling, as it crawls from one thing to another. |
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He had rather a contempt for demonstrative people, arising from his medical insight into the consequences to health of uncontrolled feeling. |
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Public feeling required the meagreness of nature to be dissimulated by tall barricades of frizzed curls and bows. |
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She respects me, no doubt, but has no longer any passionate feeling for me, and my death will distress her without plunging her in despair. |
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The house wore the startled doggy air of having been undeservedly rebuked. I knew the feeling. |
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I was feeling drowsy and so decided to make a cup of coffee to try to wake myself up. |
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An eggcrate shelter, which is open to the sky but substantial enough to give the feeling of protection, may be your answer. |
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Truth to tell, I'm feeling pretty enisled on my lounge chair, but that state will not hold for long because apparently I have a visitor. |
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Dietrich and Lenya lacked a number of singerly virtues, but their strengths lay in a kind of extramusical quality of feeling and experience. |
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The humming sound and the unvarying white light induced a sort of faintness, an empty feeling inside his head. |
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He has no feeling for what he can say to somebody in such a fragile emotional condition. |
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When you are tempted to speculate in cocoa, lie down until the feeling goes away. |
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The Nationals gave the Coalition its Senate majority and yesterday were feeling their oats. |
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And I was already suffering from a brain-melting lack of sleep anyway. But despite all that, I was actually feeling surprisingly fresh. |
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I should have done more work this weekend, but I was feeling lazy. |
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I'm feeling a bit weak and dizzy. I think I'm having a dizzy spell. |
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I read about what happened with a feeling of shock and repulsion. |
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After a couple of drinks we all started feeling pretty mellow. |
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It's hard to shake the feeling that I'm forgetting something. |
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Many a thoughtful man, musing over his second Martini and the evening paper, has had the uneasy feeling that 1984 was much closer. |
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First-time home buyers are feeling the squeeze of higher interest rates with mortgage affordability at its worst level for 16 years. |
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Only on the hypothesis that what is learnt in one generation is remembered by the next, can there be any feeling of againness or of expectancy. |
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After a local anesthetic is applied to the eye, do not rub or wipe the eye until the anesthetic has worn off and feeling in the eye returns. |
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Because many choirs were improperly used during this period, an era of antichoir feeling developed shortly after the 1905 Hymnal was published. |
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A virtue is made out of a necessity, with the child feeling far more atop and master of his oddness, his behavior now deliberate or even clever. |
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I wanted to do a song that epitomizes the feeling and vibe from back in the day while still being current. |
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Vedder and the rest of the band are at their best when they're feeling balladic. |
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They all went into the house, and left me feeling a precious idiot. I had been barking up the wrong tree this time. |
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Dust columns are called shaitans or devils by the Beloochees, who have a superstitious feeling with regard to them. |
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Nature then with rapture trembles, Music flows divine along To besoothe our restless feeling By the magic thrill of song. |
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He broke off and bit his lip, feeling that he had better subdue the rising anger in his voice. |
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It's a floating feeling, an eyes-closed, comfy, blankety feeling, the feeling of not having to worry about anything. |
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Hardy, disliked the system, feeling that people were too interested in accumulating marks in exams and not interested in the subject itself. |
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He can give a feeling of being not of this world and gives hints of supernatural connections. |
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Irritated by my feeling of non-specific mardiness, I force myself out of bed, stretching flamboyantly as I walk over to open the shutters. |
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I have a feeling that this pie is the Marmite of the school pie world. You either loved it or you hated it. |
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His later poetry was characterised by the complex interlinking of thought and feeling, especially in his sonnet sequence, The House of Life. |
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The Mosella by Ausonius demonstrated a modernism of feeling that indicates the end of classical literature as such. |
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It was an apple marshmallow sundae, I recollect. I dug my spoon into it with an assumption of gaiety which I was far from feeling. |
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When James became king of England, a feeling of uncertainty settled over the nation. |
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They represent the caprices of superficial love, and they lack in intellect, feeling, and ethics. |
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But, until you become lost to all feeling of your true interest and your natural dignity, freedom they can have from none but you. |
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This book is the most lyrical of all her works, not only in feeling but in style, being chiefly written in verse. |
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He had accepted the post reluctantly, feeling that a composer should not head a school of music. |
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Chaplin was unhappy with the union and, feeling that marriage stunted his creativity, struggled over the production of his film Sunnyside. |
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The fervour of early feeling is tempered and mellowed by the ripeness of age. |
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He had gone into Korea feeling sympathetic to communism, coming as he did from a poor family, but the experience left him permanently repelled. |
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I don't know how it started or who started it, but it took over the ground like a religious feeling. |
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In 1811, feeling obliged to relocate because of a rise in rent, Lord removed his turf and relaid it at his second ground. |
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This feeling was shared by many of the athletes, who even demanded that Athens be the permanent Olympic host city. |
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For example, one with a longer wheelbase provides the feeling of more stability by responding less to disturbances. |
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For example, his organization of the Confederation of the Rhine in 1806 promoted a feeling of nationalism. |
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Marshall's speech had explicitly included an invitation to the Soviets, feeling that excluding them would have been a sign of distrust. |
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The heart mispleases me that is held coldly, Severely closed amid the years of feeling. |
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It embodied their spirit and carried it forward, uniting their delicate feeling for chastity and purity with the ideal of monogamic love. |
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After this event there was a large feeling of gloominess over the country, a feeling that is portrayed in the painting. |
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Gorky's work seems to be a careful analysis of memory, emotion and shape, using line and color to express feeling and nature. |
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It was large, and of a dark cast, and literally glowed when he spoke with feeling or interest. |
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When phoned at the Chelsea that morning, he said he was feeling ill and postponed the engagement. |
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Later he went drinking with Reitell at the White Horse and, feeling sick again, returned to the hotel. |
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Though Wilde's health had suffered greatly from the harshness and diet of prison, he had a feeling of spiritual renewal. |
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Robin, still feeling poorly, missed the New York sessions, but the rest of the band put away instrumental tracks and demos. |
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The bed was presented as it had been when she had stayed in it for several days, feeling suicidal because of relationship difficulties. |
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Wollstonecraft contrasts her utopian picture of society, drawn with what she says is genuine feeling, to Burke's false feeling. |
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However, the stronger feeling among Scots was that the country should become a great mercantile and colonial power like England. |
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He also planted a large number of native Japanese species to give it a more exotic feeling. |
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I could tell he didn't agree but he went to the corner and took up his squirrel gun, feeling the nipple for a percussion cap. |
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I feel a lot of women think you're a freak if you feel like that, and maybe I am strange but I never got that feeling. |
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This situation caused some ill feeling at Musselburgh, which lost the right to hold the Open from that point forward. |
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There are a few nonpotato appetizers and salads if you are feeling starched out. |
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Within Henry's court there was a strong feeling that the King would be unable to lead the country through these problems. |
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Wrexham owes a large amount of its original industrial heritage to Bersham, but despite this the village still retains a rural feeling. |
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This place is a sure cure for a gimp's feeling out of place and a sure cure for a normie feeling awkward around a wheelchair. |
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The mystic objectifies a rich feeling in the pit of the stomach into a cosmology. |
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If the international was a friendly, the feeling was that I didn't have to play. |
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However, he was only given small parts in the Academy's productions, and feeling isolated and directionless, almost dropped out several times. |
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Later, at the feast, Efnisien, again feeling insulted, throws Gwern on the fire and a savage battle breaks out. |
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Later, at the feast, Efnysien, again feeling insulted, murders Gwern by burning him alive, and, as a result, a vicious battle breaks out. |
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You see I haven't been feeling well lately so I sent my orgo clone in to work for me. |
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The patient is feeling a little better, but she's not out of the woods yet. |
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Second, but more important, the altered construction of the magazines on board led to a feeling of false security. |
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Flemish feeling of identity and consciousness grew through the events and experiences of war. |
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Forgiveness, compassion, tolerance, brotherhood and the feeling of oneness are the signs of a true religion. |
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The spirit of the Roaring Twenties was marked by a general feeling of discontinuity associated with modernity, a break with traditions. |
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He had put his feet out on the floor and was feeling for his slippers with blind pedipulations. |
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Call Handlers are regularly faced with calls for service where a person is feeling suicidal and has called the police for help. |
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He reflects the Victorian period of his maturity in his feeling for order and his tendency towards moralising. |
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Edmund objects, believing Sir Thomas would disapprove and feeling that the subject matter of the play is inappropriate for his sisters. |
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Phrenology involves feeling the bumps in the skull to determine an individual's psychological attributes. |
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A work of art, for example, can transfer a message from the creator to the viewer and share an image, a feeling or an experience. |
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If, for some reason, you're here and not feeling pizzalicious, then the manicotti and the meatball hero may be considered. |
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When given as a gift in Victorian England, such a pomander indicated warmth of feeling. |
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In 1542, the thirty year old must have been feeling confident about his future prospects when he suffered two major interruptions to his life. |
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During the last decade of Franco's rule, there was a renewal of nationalist feeling in Galicia. |
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When they left, she paced the house, proprietorially, feeling the feel of each stone in the paving with bare feet. |
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He left the hall after feeling ashamed that he could not contribute a song. |
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The walls in this abandoned waiting area were painted a pukey orange, compounding the feeling of queasiness I'd had since breakfast. |
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A sudden and violent revulsion of feeling, both in the Parliament and the country, followed. |
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Not allowed to blah blah blah rhubarb rhubarb rhubarb. Just what I don't need when I'm feeling kind of seedy. |
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Alexandra collapsed onto the leather couch in the library, feeling as if she were a horse who had just been ridden hard and put away wet. |
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He had roller-coasterish mood swings and would disappear for a few days at a time, isolating himself, feeling suicidal. |
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With other experiences added on top, the feeling state becomes more entrenched, more rooted. |
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Modern rushaholics are always racing, always out of breath, always feeling behind schedule, always striving, but seldom managing to get ahead. |
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But some countermeasures provide the feeling of security instead of the reality. These are nothing more than security theater. |
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With her aching back and pronounced limp, she was feeling particularly seedy today. |
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I worked hard my senior year, something that was particularly difficult due to the senioritis that many others were feeling. But it paid off! |
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However, just like said bombs, your sexperiences as a fresher can leave you feeling happy one minute and confused the next. |
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Barry sounded lighter, his spirits lifting slightly from the shell shocking humiliation and helplessness he'd been feeling. |
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With raucous laughter in his ears, the parson turned and looked for Lace, feeling rather lonely. |
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I smiled and then looked away, feeling a bit awkward and on the verge of a full-out sobfest. |
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Remember that refusing special ed help at this point may mean that you go through school feeling like a failure and never catch up. |
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But this momentary ebullition of feeling is but a storm in a tea-kettle compared to the ferocity of a jealous lover seeking to devour his rival. |
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Make sure the bolt threads in without a feeling of looseness, and if there is any, don't try to muscle the bolt supertight with a wrench. |
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There is a feeling in Washington that we are gathering at the side of the track to watch a gigantic economic train wreck one of these days. |
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But the feeling of aloneness, of isolation, never goes away. |
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Inara, I ain't looking for anything from you. I'm just feeling kind of truthsome right now. |
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When you've just had a tumble between the sheets and are feeling rumpled and lazy, she may want to get up so she can make the bed. |
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There seems to be a prevalent feeling that something is amiss at Apple. |
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I had a feeling that Turkish authorities were closing their eyes. |
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In both, the first awareness of other creatures by the ur-ancestor arrives through a feeling of a crowd on the skin. |
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When a girl falls in love, after first using her head to find a suitable mate to fall in love with, it is such a wonderful feeling. |
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To prevent velocitization, the feeling of going slower than you really are, keep checking the speedometer while you drive. |
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The sensual delight of biting into the waferish cookies is a feeling to savour. |
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Sometimes when I'm feeling my Wheaties, I want to be the one to go out and experiment, and I expect the drummer to help me by keeping it down. |
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I had been feeling like a bowling-alley widow, but knew he loved the game, so I suggested we join a mixed league. |
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A curious instance of perversion in religio-sexual feeling, bordering on zooerastia, is the case of St. Veronica. |
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The readers were expecting things to be a little more direct, and so they're probably feeling a bit flounderish. |
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After dealing with the children all day, I just can't help feeling frazzled. |
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It was one of those moments of intense feeling when the frost of the Scottish people melts like a snow-wreath. |
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But there is an underlying feeling that the worst is yet to come. |
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She hated the poisoned feeling in her throat, and no matter how often she gargled she felt unclean and disgusting. |
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She was in love with me for 10 years, and still hasn't got over the fact that the feeling wasn't mutual. |
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Robert and Susan were so in love with each other that nobody could go near them without feeling like a gooseberry. |
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Everyone was feeling grandacious, as if getting dressed for a night of beauing. |
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Jake felt that rat feeling again and the gut shot realization that he'd gotten Greg killed. |
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The propensity for nationalistic feeling varies greatly across the UK, and can rise and fall over time. |
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If you're feeling hipsterific, try Top Chef Mike Isabella's goth-like Mexican restaurant, Bandolero. |
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Murray did not want to share the work, feeling that he would accelerate his work pace with experience. |
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The Caledonians, short on supplies and feeling their position becoming desperate, revolted later that year along with the Maeatae. |
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Perhaps the most dispiriting part for Manchester City came from that unmistakable feeling that, if anything, the gulf has widened. |
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Woke up feeling illish and to my despair found it was pouring with black, cold rain. It all looked depressing and dingy. |
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She gave me an illogical reply and left me standing there feeling confused. |
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This feeling of insecurity and isolation causes inbearable spiritual anguish, fear and torture. |
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So inconscionable are these common people, and so little feeling have they of God, or their own souls' good. |
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National feeling that emerged from the war unified both France and England further. |
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It is with a feeling of real affliction that we heard of the tragical and irreparate loss of President Kennedy. |
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The feeling of nostalgia for jewelrylike watches extends beyond the practical. |
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Not that such universally prevalent, universally jurant, feeling of Hope, could be a unanimous one. |
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Nelson was made comfortable, fanned and brought lemonade and watered wine to drink after he complained of feeling hot and thirsty. |
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However, on 15 November 1915 he resigned from the government, feeling his energies were not being used. |
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Lloyd was elected, but there was a feeling among all parties that the system of election needed to be overhauled. |
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The result was a feeling that political factors were clouding what should be purely economic judgements on monetary policy. |
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Some colleagues were resentful of the attention Hawking received, feeling it was due to his disability. |
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The biliousness and livery feeling will disappear and the feeling of joy and happiness will be the reward. |
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Working-class families are feeling the pinch in the wake of the recession. |
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The ceiling, or fifth wall, provides another decorative opportunity. Something as simple as painting the ceiling a shade darker than the walls can create a cozy feeling. |
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The first step will typically be to find out the initial feeling or reaction of the jurors to the case, which may be by a show of hands, or via secret ballot. |
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Italian and French influences increased at the beginning of the 19th century with strong eclectic overtones that gave the local architecture a unique feeling. |
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In the past, emperors based their right to rule mostly on heredity and so could listen to remonstrance from below without necessarily feeling that legitimacy was at stake. |
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Whitehouse had possibly misinterpreted the results of his own experiments but was doubtless feeling financial pressure as plans for the cable were already well under way. |
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Any man of common right feeling will love and cherish her who is his own, as I this woman, with my whole heart, though she was but a fruitling of my spear. |
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History meant that feeling was now replaced by rational thought, and private considerations by public, accompanied by properties, prohibitions and restraints. |
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In the Japanese arts furniture and design focused on the quality of the space, which was meant to evoke a calming and organic feeling to the interior. |
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There may be a giant sea-liner feeling its way down to the sea and it would be a very awkward obstruction, even for the giantliest of giant air liners. |
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Both Liverpool and Manchester Corporation rejected this, feeling that the interests of their city required its water supply to be independent of that of any other city. |
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National identity may refer to the subjective feeling one shares with a group of people about a nation, regardless of one's legal citizenship status. |
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National identity, like other social identities, engenders positive emotions such as pride and love to one's nation, and feeling of obligations toward other citizens. |
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The second, or civic group, contained the items about feeling British, respecting laws and institutions, speaking English, and having British citizenship. |
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Essentially a Romantic, Carlyle attempted to reconcile Romantic affirmations of feeling and freedom with respect for historical and political fact. |
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His heartless actions and cold manner left her saddened and feeling alone. |
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On Tennyson's death there was a considerable feeling that there was no acceptable successor, William Morris and Swinburne being hardly suitable as court poets. |
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The new century was characterised by a feeling of great optimism. |
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There is also the feeling that he has always looked towards America. |
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But a clammy feeling soon dampened his enthusiasm, and he looked down to find his fine white suit streaked with violet where the ianthinas had discharged their ink. |
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So there I was feeling totally gutted by the whole ghastly business. |
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Is it OK for a chunky, 40-something white guy to feel bootylicious? Oh, how I hope it's acceptable, because if feeling bootylicious is wrong, I don't wanna be right. |
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He draws out the purificatory implications of Apollo's apotreptic intervention when an uneasy feeling rises from the mantic spirit within him to meet the voice of the god. |
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She explained that feeling British was not dependent on a British state. |
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I always liked kids but can now babytalk for hours without feeling weird. |
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The decision left Potters boss Tony Pulis apoplectic on the touchline, a feeling his West Ham counterpart Avram Grant was to share immediately after the break. |
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I stayed indoors all day, feeling indisposed to finish mowing the lawn. |
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Felix had succumbed already to the feeling that youth ruled the roost. |
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Elizabeth bowed to public feeling against the marriage, learning from the mistake her sister made when she married Philip II of Spain, and sent the Duke of Anjou away. |
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Indeed, game researchers Bryce and Rutter reported that the feeling many gamers have of being in the zone is comparable to what athletes experience on the field. |
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He stared intimidatingly at John. John, feeling threatened, ran off. |
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More often, it's to make the other parent the bogeyperson and leave the step-parent and their partner feeling it's not their fault that the child behaves like this. |
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The feeling of jaildom deepened around them. Neither had ever seen the inside of a prison, but each felt that this surely was what a prison must be like. |
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The foggy effect gives an oniric feeling to the whole picture. |
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The exclusion of three Ulster counties, County Donegal, County Monaghan and County Cavan, from 'Northern Ireland' left unionists there feeling isolated and betrayed. |
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As it was, though, I had to smile and pretend to enjoy the feeling of scrabbly little legs in my mouth, or the whimpers of something that didn't enjoy being chewed. |
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The principal reproach that Hartmann makes against Schleiermacher's theory is religious alogism, the blindness and amorphousness of naked feeling. |
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I decided to go exercise rather than sit around all day feeling blah. |
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He managed to affect a smile despite feeling quite miserable. |
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If a brand's attribute is being environmentally friendly, customers will receive the benefit of feeling that they are helping the environment by associating with the brand. |
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Attitude branding is the choice to represent a larger feeling, which is not necessarily connected with the product or consumption of the product at all. |
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The notion is thoroughly characteristic of the mystical level, and the Aufgabe of making it articulate was surely set to Hegel's intellect by mystical feeling. |
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To like everyone and to be happy with anyone was a virtue and its own reward, but I realized now that for weeks I had been feeling livery, impatient, restless. |
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People with BPD are sometimes too interpersonally sensitive, and they overjudge situations, such as feeling that no one loves them or that people are talking about them. |
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Hence the feeling of aporia, the paradoxical non-road we must cross. |
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Far from feeling threatened, my girlfriend finds solace in them and would view any young man not admitting to a man crush as uncomfortable with his sexuality. |
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If you carry on like that, the law will soon be feeling your collar. |
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Coke spoke with feeling of the probable fate of the Queen and the rest of the King's family, and of the innocents who would have been caught up in the explosion. |
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The state of apprehension already mentioned as the only conscious feeling of intensity may exceptionally lead to impulsive acts or to a paraphobia. |
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This feeling, grounded on the experience of centuries of oppression, was not to be allayed by smooth explanations on the part of the advocates of the Constitution. |
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By the turn of the seventeenth century this vast expansion of the Dutch had formed colonies in the East Indies and soon they started feeling as well the wrath of piracy. |
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The feeling would steal on me, too, as it still does, of the little I knew of all the dark, unrecited sufferings embedded so deeply in the lives about me. |
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It began, 'Where is my wandering boy to-night?' and by the time she was through I was feeling so mushy and sobby that I put a five instead of a one into the plate by mistake. |
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Cedric was not feeling peppy when he woke up two hours before dawn. |
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The pains extend down the legs, with a numby, burning feeling. |
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His own egotism protects him from feeling passion for anyone else. |
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In his smaller poetic works, Johnson relied on short lines and filled his work with a feeling of empathy, which possibly influenced Housman's poetic style. |
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Mother and son attended a public parade through London and a grand service of thanksgiving in St Paul's Cathedral on 27 February 1872, and republican feeling subsided. |
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Austen was feeling unwell by early 1816, but ignored the warning signs. |
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In January 1964, feeling he had outgrown the circuit artistically, and frustrated by having to follow the rules of bandleaders, Hendrix decided to venture out on his own. |
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She had shared his sheets, and, in nightmares of remorse, he had shared her body, waking with drastic regret, feeling as soiled and soilsome as the city itself. |
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During the war Vaughan Williams stopped writing music, and after returning to civilian life he took some time before feeling ready to compose new works. |
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When it comes to superficial, the only false thing about me is the capped tooth in my mouth, my hair colour and big, beamy false toothed smile when I'm feeling down. |
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The studio subsequently turned back to Blake Edwards, who was adamant not to recast the character, feeling certain that no one could adequately replace Sellers. |
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Pop came over with a number of his saloon cronies.... They were feeling no pain as usual, and all was high hilarity as my dad showed them proudly all around. |
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It's a pity you're feeling unwell because there's a party on tonight. |
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To this was added, by later practitioners, a feeling for the 'sublime' and uncanny, and an interest in ancient English poetic forms and folk poetry. |
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A 30-year-old woman, with no heart disease, was referred to our center with a history of rare episodes of sustained tachycardia and frequent feeling of extrasystoles. |
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Causing intensely bitter feeling between players as well as injury. |
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Go, and never forget that you owe your lives to our feeling of humanity. |
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Yet there is a natural undercurrent tending to a national feeling and toward a union of the Germans into one great nation, ruled by one common head as a national unit. |
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Let's go home now, it's late, plus I'm not feeling too well. |
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A person may be a national of a state, in the sense of having a formal legal relationship with it, without subjectively or emotionally feeling a part of that state. |
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In these circumstances Alexander, feeling more than ever that he could only rely on his own kin, turned his thoughts to further family aggrandizement. |
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Ms. Whelan and Mr. Millepied are, as they were last spring, excellent, heart-catching in the midheight hovering lifts where athleticism becomes feeling. |
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I stuck it out for about an hour and then, apprised by a hollow feeling in the midriff that the dinner hour was approaching, laid a course for home. |
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Nothing will do more to intensify the feeling in Ulster than that she should be placed, even temporarily, under the Free State which she abominates. |
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Continued ill health during his second premiership caused him to contemplate resignation, but his lieutenant, Derby, was unwilling, feeling that he could not manage the Queen. |
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Upon the surrender of Warsaw to General Ivan Paskievich, many Polish troops, feeling they could not go on, withdrew into Prussia and there laid down their arms. |
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Cabral, feeling there's nothing to be achieved here and worried about missing the monsoon winds to India, decides to break off the negotiations and sail on. |
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Mrs Flintwinch crossed the hall, feeling its pavement cold to her stockingless feet, and peeped in between the rusty hinges on the door, which stood a little open. |
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Lawson resigned that October, feeling that Thatcher had undermined him. |
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Three years later, commercial real estate started feeling the effects. |
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Mr. Winkle... took his hand with a feeling of regard, akin to veneration. |
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Ideas are our rudders. As the soul glides along the warm and swelling sea of feeling, it can only be turned to new points of the moral compass by them. |
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Early symptoms include weakness, feeling tired, and sore arms and legs. |
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He took us on board purely out of a national feeling, for his ship was strong-handed without us, having thirty-two souls, all told, when he received us five. |
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It might have been a good thing if he had, unsuited as he was physically, but the mood passed easily under fraternal dissuadings and a feeling of duty toward his father. |
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Little trace of feeling or originality remained to be lamented when, at the end of the eighteenth century, the Delftware potteries began to go out of business. |
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Sit down, have a rest, and by and by, you'll be feeling better. |
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The whole effort was greater than the sum of the individual parts, and there was a nice fellow feeling between these people, an unforced companionability. |
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Can you imagine paying attention to the feeling of space between all of your fingers, just as you feel the purlicue between your thumb and index finger? |
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I doubt that there's a lack of QUILTBAG gamers who want an inclusive experience, and who are still feeling the sting of other oversights BioWare has made to their personhood. |
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Godwin's Memoirs portrays Wollstonecraft as a woman deeply invested in feeling who was balanced by his reason and as more of a religious sceptic than her own writings suggest. |
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