He feels very happy and believes the time he devotes is well spent because he is generously rewarded with love. |
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The competition has only lasted one minute, but both girls are breathing hard, and Lisa feels her strength fading. |
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For a moment, the murk feels strangely comforting, like walking out of a rave into the balm of an urban winter smog. |
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But all is not what it seems I'm afraid and she now feels she may have made the move in haste. |
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Finally, anyone who feels they received a very raw deal by being sold the endowment in the first place may be able to claim compensation. |
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My limbs are stiff and painful, my nose is running like a tap, my throat feels like I've swallowed a razor blade, and I feel like I am drunk. |
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So when you get back to work, you're not only drunk but your tongue feels like someone scraped it with the dull end of a razor blade. |
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Along the way, life lessons are learned and current social issues are explored, but it rarely feels heavy-handed. |
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He still feels fine but there will be a price to pay for his reacquaintance with bad habits. |
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He circles possibilities, though he feels it won't matter how his resume reads, what color tie he wears or how cordial he is in the interview. |
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My head feels like someone set off a bomb in it, and I'm wobbly on my feet, but at least I don't feel sick. |
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No large buildings could be constructed on top of the tunnel itself, just on either side, so this quiet backstreet feels unnaturally wide. |
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The chassis inspires real confidence, feels perfectly balanced and even gets better as you push it harder. |
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She feels trapped by wifehood and motherhood, and she feels she's a failure at them both. |
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Though she is not crazy about diamonds, she feels they go well with platinum. |
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The Inn is fine, as inns go, but there's something about Sea Isle City that feels depressingly generic. |
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This film feels like nothing more than a series of anticlimaxes wrapped within one large anticlimax. |
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And I doubt whether the government feels threatened by fascists in the way it feels threatened by anti-capitalists. |
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Like the novel itself, the film still feels as relevant and potent as ever. |
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Overall the case feels like a real quality unit, worthy of being rebadged by some of the bigger brand-name PC makers. |
|
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And he is now walking on air because he feels like he's gotten the attention of everybody in this country and that's important to him. |
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There is a ringing sound in her ears and she feels as though she is drifting out of consciousness. |
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The Amazing Spider-Man finally hits theaters this week, and we've been gearing up for the Spidey reboot for what feels like forever. |
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My spirit feels reborn, and I breathe in the sweet air of the pardoned prisoner. |
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But he is not a man to hold his tongue when he feels strongly about an issue. |
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The resulting song feels overproduced and too distinctly current, and temporarily hinders the album's retro charm. |
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Carolyn has opened the bay window in the room and is looking outside, when Liz feels a chill. |
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Now, with one of his five treatments still to go, he says he feels 90 per cent better. |
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If you come away with a glimpse of the goal for better airmanship, Davisson feels like he's done his job. |
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Maimonides compares this to the intense yearnings that a man feels for a woman. |
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The funny thing is that this film feels more like an independent film than a studio release. |
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Knowing that, should I be terribly surprised that the whole film feels pretty much like a tired old retread of at least a dozen earlier films? |
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And despite global recessionary trends, the industry feels that the next few months will see a healthy increase in travel. |
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I am rather asserting that the laity feels that church leadership does not know what it is talking about. |
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In the wintry rain, it feels bleak, but today it was bathed in summer light and it felt like a really good place to be. |
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I also use a quick wipe of the Floral Skin Toner when my skin feels grubby. |
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The film has an amazing amount of high gloss energy, and it feels like an early '80s answer to A Hard Day's Night. |
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She feels that this has more than recompensed her burning desire to be a journalist. |
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It's kind of what I was hoping for, it's why I witch the narrator so you can see how each character thinks and feels and stuff. |
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At first it seems like any other grey, anonymous street but the further down you go, the more it feels like a gateway to another world. |
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She still feels nauseous, so forces a finger down her throat but manages just a dry retch. |
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However to his dismay he feels Brazil's style of play that took them to a record fifth World Cup is destroying the beautiful game. |
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A pluviophile is a lover of rain who never feels gloomy when it rains but finds joy and happiness! |
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The end result is a careening car that feels much more rubbery than controlled. |
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He feels an overgrowth of Candida Albicans, which allows klebsiella bacteria to enter the blood stream, is the main culprit. |
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Never one to underestimate or understate her own judgements, she feels that China is communist and calls a red a red. |
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Possibly the best part about it is that the doorman only allows enough people in so that the place feels exciting, not packed. |
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It feels emotional and meaningful to me because I do think love is incredibly redemptive. |
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He is a non-executive director of a kitchen installation company, who feels that the knives are out for him. |
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It feels to me that this is like building an annex before the main building has gone up. |
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Freewheeling through such scenery, with the smell of pine intermingling with woodsmoke in the breeze, one feels an irrepressible high. |
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He discusses allostasis, the fight-or-flight reaction a person feels in the face of stressful situations. |
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The mention of frilly ankle socks also made Max ask me who this Henry is, because we all know how my son feels about frilly ankle socks. |
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Dr. Pillai feels that pharmaco-genetics could serve as a bridge between allopathy and ayurveda and lead to a borrowing between the two systems. |
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He feels lucky his own family knows of his sexual orientation and has accepted him and his partner. |
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Having said that, it will be interesting to see how a working model actually feels in use. |
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One reader says that when she feels well enough, she'll do feverish workouts at the gym. |
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The intensity of her cardio and weight workouts changes depending on how she feels. |
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I do this drill daily in my workouts, and add extra time to work on it when my stroke feels low and slow. |
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When the male ego feels under threat from the anima, Jung postulates, it may project the attacking motive onto an external woman or women. |
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He doesn't look his age and says that he feels and has the outlook of a younger man. |
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The move was a real wrench, and he feels guilty about it even though everyone has told him he has done the right thing. |
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Everywhere one feels the influence of the Mediterranean and particularly on the specific xerophilous flora and fauna of the region. |
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Despite the expressionistic framing and fancy camera angles, the film feels remarkably flat and prosaic. |
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When he feels somebody is wronging his client, he jumps in front of a microphone. |
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The club, established in 1972, feels that with this new boat, rowing is on a firm footing locally for many years to come. |
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In fact, the whole act of writing anything at all feels rather strange and alien to me now. |
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This helps to explain why skin often looks and feels more leathery as we age. |
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If the live CD seems like it's been a long time coming, you can rest assured that it feels exactly the same way for its creator. |
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Despite the longevity of his time at the school, Mr Collings said that the school still feels new to him. |
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Vocal delivery feels like a poetry reading, spoken as much as sung, but with long drawn syllables. |
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But he clearly feels in no hurry to rush back in the pop scene during such lean times for dance music. |
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The truth is that cable news executives shot themselves in the foot by surrendering to something that looks and feels like news but isn't really. |
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His respect for the novel as an art form means he spent four years on this one, and feels he is a success. |
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Outside the Asian school, waiting to pick up the consul's children, he feels the street go still, the shops round about go dead. |
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You should work with a topic that arouses real feelings, something that actually touches you or feels a little raw. |
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The details are unimportant, but it feels like maybe some of the goodwill or aroha we picked up earlier in the year is evaporating. |
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Now the room feels larger and lighter, thanks in part to the natural light reflecting off the angled ceiling and into the space. |
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As Frank continues to stare at Olivia, whose penetrating gaze seems able to capture his secrets, his chest feels heavy, leaden. |
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I identify as an androgyne, by the way, in case anyone feels that's relevant to deciding how to take this response. |
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He feels guilt over that, but he also resents you for bringing something like this up at such a crucial point in the journey. |
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Initially, choosing a mentor and setting goals closely resembles what it feels like to be congruent. |
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Old British cars used to have an indicator stalk similarly disposed, and it feels entirely natural in such machines. |
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My body feels completely alive, yet growing cool, the muscles gone lax with something more powerful than sleep. |
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And everyone understands how it feels to watch birds coming in to roost as a sky darkens. |
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His dry humour and his lived-in face perfectly convey the hopelessness he feels as he tries to come to terms with his personal demons. |
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She is love-struck and will requite the strong love that she thinks Benedick feels for her. |
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The initial intuitive repugnance that Lyndsay feels at the idea of racial mixture is ratified by her empirical experience. |
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The little brother gets a square deal all round and feels that he can fall back on his big brother in time of need. |
|
The kooky comedy may have had 'em rolling in the aisles forty years ago, but today the humor feels a trifle campy and seriously dated. |
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Just lately it feels like that well has overflowed and all those little packages are coming undone. |
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He is keen that he shouldn't be perceived as turning his back on British theatre, which he feels is on a roll. |
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He feels Zambian music should reflect the history, traditions and culture of the Zambian people. |
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Finally his regiment successfully repels a charge by the enemy, and Henry feels relief and elation at his feeling of success. |
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Initially it feels leaden, the roisterous energy of the band's 2002 debut dissipated and replaced not with maturity but hesitancy. |
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I am one of the great army of black youth of this country who feels with the intuitive instinct of the oppressed, that a crisis is imminent. |
|
The set-up of the court is different from that for adults so the youth on trial feels more a part of the process. |
|
Now, if I get some MP to sign a letter, it feels like I've achieved my life's ambition. |
|
It's a fascinating listen and yet constantly feels like a sampler for something bigger. |
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He knows he is right and so feels no need to listen to advice that goes against his conviction. |
|
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He feels around him, sweeping his arms in wider and wider arcs until he's sure the bag is nearby. |
|
He is awake in the middle of the night and he feels as if the hotel is being rocked by an earthquake. |
|
Discovering you have a natural talent or aptitude for something feels good. |
|
Even now she feels the effect of the illness although it seems, at last, to be under control. |
|
I also lost so much fiber to the lint filter that the finished fabric now feels thin. |
|
David feels like he is in another world, noiseless except for the scuffing of the barber's shoes on the lino and the snap of his scissors. |
|
The film feels grittily authentic at times and like a comic road movie at others. |
|
The mixture of fear and exhilaration he feels when passing through a police roadblock isn't logical, but it is completely understandable. |
|
There may be ritualism behaviour which the subject feels compelled to carry out. |
|
Shaken by his proximity and the truth of his words, Daphne feels goosebumps rising on her skin. |
|
But the poem is mostly static, because the sequencing of lines, despite the abecedarian scheme, feels inadvertently arbitrary. |
|
Thus even a not-entirely-great movie like City by the Sea feels like wafts of fresh air. |
|
Having chosen to ride on his considerable reputation, the curator has assembled a show that feels alternately meandering and hasty. |
|
If Polanski's Twist can be faulted for anything, it's perhaps in presenting a version of the novel that feels ever so slightly abridged. |
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Williams says she already feels more energetic, and she's finally able to visit her sister, who lives in a third-floor walk-up. |
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He pulls the covers from his body, stands, and feels the hair rising on his arms. |
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It's soft and moving in the right places, but feels hesitant to pack a powerful wallop. |
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Now I know how she feels when she can't get into her jeans during that time of the month. |
|
Clearly the Fed feels that growth in the economy can continue for some time before the slack in terms of labour resources is absorbed. |
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He feels the need to retreat into impersonal abstractions, into structures or alleged structures over which the victim has no control. |
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The dialogue, too, feels like piecework, as if the bons mots and ripostes have been assembled from a library of index cards. |
|
When asked how he feels about TAAFI horning in on his still-developing territory, he is quick to brush away any suggested rivalry. |
|
When you lay a baby on the sheepskin, he or she still feels warmly held, and rests or plays more contentedly. |
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It's no great shakes when an old guy feels a bit tired and jaded, and unable to function as a poet for a while. |
|
At 190 mph the car feels imperiously stable, like the USS Enterprise at warp speed. |
|
But it's done with such relish and infectious enthusiasm that it feels like a much lighter read. |
|
You also don't really sound like the bitter musician who feels like the record companies have ripped you off. |
|
He feels like his body is ripping apart, like he's on fire from the inside out. |
|
A gecko in the hand feels cool and its broad, padded feet cling to skin like delicate suckers. |
|
The washy gray background of Untitled, 1960, for example, suggests a wintry landscape and feels lovingly painted. |
|
For the first time in the play, he feels his own frailties and limitations and notes them. |
|
A minority bands together and feels a kinship, if only for a moment that is as long as a muttered wassup, man? |
|
I think what makes it a more watchable and probably accessible film is that it feels like a richer experience. |
|
But he says he's principally taking action because he feels he's owed an apology. |
|
Sometimes Sara looks at Sarah's school friends and feels a pang of jealousy, of anger. |
|
There is intense sibling jealousy and she feels she is not loved as much as the youngest child. |
|
My knees ache, my legs are in a tangle, and every inch of my untoned body feels as if it has been put through a vigorous exercise routine. |
|
Yet Eriska is so isolated, so thoroughly out on a limb, that getting there still feels like a journey to the edge of time and place. |
|
Any judge has to draw back from an emotional anger that any right-minded thinking person feels for what you did. |
|
It stores more than 100 waypoints, displays various features in different colours and feels good in your hand. |
|
|
One feels quite sorry for our politicians and their wives that they have to suffer all this nonsense in their busy lives. |
|
Each of them feels that nuclear weaponry is a viable way to ensure their security. |
|
Liz gets angry at him and tells him that if he feels that way about the family, what difference would the truth make anyway? |
|
They seem to know better than anyone what this feels like, what we're going through. |
|
When starting a car after a long period of inactivity, it often feels sluggish and un-responsive. This is often because the fuel has weathered. |
|
This time I don't feel that way so much, the wriggling and jiggling and tickling inside feels more like a reassurance that all is well. |
|
Even though it's the way forward and so on, the way forward that still feels like twenty foot back, but anyhow. |
|
Is there anyone out there who runs a site who feels that weblogs really need validation any more? |
|
The subtle effects of light are strikingly investigated, but the right-angled hatchwork feels abstract, and therefore more contemporary. |
|
It's been done out rather stylishly, but still feels rustic, with original limewashed stone walls, and the stalls and hay rack are still there. |
|
The whole mystery-gemstones-as-nuclear-fuel angle feels ripped off from a grade-B sci-fi-flick, and out of place in an urban actioner. |
|
Everyone feels that they've been there, done that, bought the action figure and worn the T-shirt. |
|
However, she feels that the job satisfaction will more than make up for any reservations she has. |
|
She's in love with the way her brain feels when it's called to action stations. |
|
It often feels like you could attend a literary event every night of the week if you wanted to. |
|
The child feels a sense of right and wrong, believes right will win and wants to contribute to this. |
|
The track is nearly seven minutes long, but, in actuality, it feels almost too short. |
|
Tap on a freshly dug potato and it feels crisp, like an apple right off the tree. |
|
He often eats there after a match, which he feels could also contribute to his weight gain. |
|
It feels like it's an incredibly weighty decision, that you can make a huge mistake. |
|
|
Perhaps she feels her word, given the weightiness of her scholarship, is enough. |
|
Why did we ever choose to become clumsy land beasts when water is our essence and feels so much like home? |
|
Johan feels no compassion for him, ridiculing even his suicide effort as a failure. |
|
I don't want to speak for him, but I do believe that in a way he feels like that's not necessarily a lifelike thing. |
|
Michael feels Karen deserves a well-earned break after the festive madness. |
|
It does not require even half an education to guess why he feels obliged to adduce flimsy evidence and extrapolate fanciful conclusions from it. |
|
Out among the redwoods, bays, and oaks of the Berkeley hills, she feels totally, joyfully at home. |
|
It feels like a perfect market town, nestling around the well-proportioned cobbled quadrangle called Market Place. |
|
Joe says that by putting in the hours at the social hall, he feels he is giving something back to the community. |
|
Unlike other products enhanced with antiperspirant, it feels grippy, not tacky. |
|
Princess Ai is a great character because she feels like my alter ego, but in a fantasy setting. |
|
I wonder if some resentment the anti-intellectual crowd feels towards intellectuals is rooted in academia. |
|
Rowlands freely admits he feels inexperienced on tarmac rallies and that he is still on a steep learning curve. |
|
In places, the jungle-like vegetation surrounds the river so densely it feels like an old Tarzan movie. |
|
When the same sentence is reproduced verbatim in the blurb, one feels that the book will be long on rhapsodies and short on substance. |
|
But now U.S. forces feels it's a nest of former regime loyalists and anti coalition fighters. |
|
On rewatch, this feels like a sly joke on the part of Lost's writers, cluing us into what's in store for the audience and the castaways. |
|
The third horse starts to run when it really feels the pain of the whip on its skin. |
|
But he also feels that an end would provide relief from the pain of his loneliness. |
|
Other than that, it's 6.30 ish, so I'm away to Oxford, whistling a happy tune and lugging a bag that feels like I've packed it for about a month. |
|
|
But he feels he may be whistling in the wind, with precious little hope of forcing a change in the short term. |
|
With his peroxide head bowed, eyes closed, the old man feels his way forward, bandy legs shuffling, shoulders stooped, senses bat sharp, as keen as razor wire. |
|
Abraham, a yellow cab driver and student, feels that blacks are targeted unfairly by the police. |
|
Yet, the ever-visionary Van Gogh still feels the possibility of acclaim after his imminent death. |
|
You also had a pretty uncomfortable costume in The Addams Family, which is surprising, since your performance feels so effortless. |
|
In one, Adlai Stevenson explains, like a displaced Mafia don, why he feels angry at JFK, whose career he helped to advance. |
|
If it feels like How I Met Your Mother has been airing for decades, that's because it has. |
|
Above all, what does this decision to avoid Amritsar tell us about how this White House feels about Americans? |
|
No one feels it necessary to tell angelica that Bunny was once her father's lover. |
|
And an anonymous junior in a fraternity at Emory University feels similarly. |
|
I doubt Wills feels it is disgusting for pro-life activists to register voters at anti-abortion protests. |
|
Gandley feels that any distinction between pro-anorexia sites and some healthy living sites are arbitrary. |
|
It feels like you delight in the atmospherics, but you want to stay away from the violence. |
|
The P.L. Travers backstory is told at length in what feels almost like a separate, rather less enjoyable, film. |
|
Since bandwidth has become reasonable, paying extra for it feels like a backwards move. |
|
He has a sense of honor and an instinct for revenge when he feels his honor has been besmirched. |
|
Critics of the bigot should begin placing a bit less emphasis on what he says or feels than what he actually does. |
|
The Army leadership also feels it can weather any blowback from Washington. |
|
In that way, this return to The War Room feels like the bookend to the political dynamic it helped set in motion. |
|
The bugs are so loud that stepping into the darkness feels like being surrounded by an enormous, pulsing heart. |
|
|
As a member of its cast for almost 30 years, I must admit this feels a little like tacking pieces of Jell-O to a bulletin board. |
|
We have hit the bottom of a business cycle before and this is what it feels like. |
|
It all sounds a bit dramatic, but that cactus feels like something special. |
|
It feels more like a peace offering than a warning, a casual gesture signifying her candidness. |
|
Though it feels like panic attacks start from a physical place, they actually start in our minds, says Carmichael. |
|
It feels like someone is chopping up my legs with a machete or burning them with a torch from the inside out. |
|
Humans are tribal, and it feels natural to think that humanity has always been eager to categorize on the basis of skin color. |
|
Better still, Kill Your Friends, despite its 1997 setting, feels bracingly, cathartically, of the moment. |
|
Victoria and Nolan are as catty and delightful as ever, but the rest of the show feels tired. |
|
Set in a cavernous industrial-style warehouse, Psycle HQ feels like a club you want to be a part of. |
|
Even after getting used to the controls and mastering nice smooth corners the camera feels a lot more abrupt in first person than in the third person view. |
|
Poor wimps have no idea what it feels like to be this jacked and strong. |
|
He is not angry with her and says he feels lucky to be able to die in her arms and asks her to squeeze his hand if she accepts him as her husband. |
|
He feels as though he is accepted in this community, he belongs. |
|
The gameplay presented in this latest outing feels so broken and janky that any fan who may brave a purchase will likely end up feeling disgusted and cheated. |
|
That feels inherently manufactured, creating a setting wherein episodes are churned out, assembly-line style. |
|
There is a stillness in the early hours that feels to me the clearest, healthiest drug humanly available. |
|
He feels that the project will actually lead to overcrowding in Bangalore due to an influx of people from other cities and towns and not the other way round. |
|
And if Edna feels too clunky for nursery school, you can always call her Edie. |
|
In many of the pieces, even one depicting a rabbinically bearded Christ hung brutally against some orangey metal grating, the crucifixion feels like a contemporary event. |
|
|
Call if your child feels as if his heart is racing or skipping a beat. |
|
What FX is offering, then, is a new series that feels like a coen Brothers movie. |
|
Yet the fact that innovation is a wonderful, exciting thing is cold comfort to the man who feels he has become obsolete. |
|
He uses some combination of the words comfort or discomfort in regards to how he feels about situations over 30 times. |
|
Otherwise, he decides whether or not to perform a wedding based on how comfortable he feels with the spouse on the outside. |
|
Ultimately, though, it feels like more of a compendium piece than a fully formed documentary. |
|
The boy feels rejected and confused, and then hits on a Christmas morning solution, delivering a penguin mate for his penguin. |
|
That means Hwang could have consolidated his position in the interim and now feels secure enough to travel for a day. |
|
Instead, it appears to be part of a contingency plan in case Abbas feels he has exhausted his political options. |
|
But many in the church stress that this leads people down the wrong path, because it encourages the rationalization that if it feels good, it must be okay. |
|
When exercise feels like a dreaded chore, our bodies release stress hormones that counteract many of its positive effects. |
|
Louie Psihoyos' The cove, on the other hand, feels entirely fresh, and is as dramatic and gripping as any live-action thriller. |
|
My heart thumps loudly and the gun feels slippery in my sweaty hands. |
|
And tracking down ingredients such as tat tsoi no longer feels like a wild goose chase, since speciality foods are now stocked in many supermarkets. |
|
The wind chill is particularly low and feels very cold indeed. |
|
He is a very good coach in every respect, the first guy to give you a kick up the backside but also the first to give you a pat on the back when he feels you deserve it. |
|
I cheat and air-kiss, which feels silly but frankly is all I can manage. |
|
But I can tell you what it feels like to be attacked by a grizzly bear, gored by a bull, bitten by a venomous snake or attacked by African killer bees. |
|
If you only vote on how a person personally feels about abortion, you will never want her to darken your door. |
|
He's become so withdrawn and distant that he feels like a stranger. |
|
|
Reading these dead-on descriptions, a runner feels a pleasurable sensation of recognition. |
|
There's something about the way we came together that still feels like it had an element of kismet or fate in it, something that just had to happen, and it happened good. |
|
The decadence of it at 10 in the morning, it just feels like the perfect reward! |
|
A few minutes later, I understand why it all feels like a round of deja vu. |
|
Her relationship with her own parents is so close that she feels saddened when she hears other parents saying they don't want to know what their children are up to. |
|
The adolescent girls appeared to account for both internal reactions as well as external feedback when considering what feels best and worst about being good. |
|
I must get a bit poorly sometimes, otherwise I wouldn't know what a head cold feels like, but I can't remember the last time I took a day off sick. |
|
Computer-guided meditation is nice for those of us who have difficultly even understanding what focus feels like. |
|
He plays the role with a well placed tragic regality befitting someone who feels he is above everyone, yet below really people, a strange place to be indeed. |
|
Tallinn feels palpably Scandinavian with its polished old-town brick, seaside positioning and glut of cool cafes. |
|
Despite it's name it actually feels more like a New York bar as they've wisely avoided the usual spread of overly lacquered replica oriental furniture. |
|
But a part of me feels like you should stay in Los Angeles to schmooze with A-grade celebrities and pee alongside Jack Nicholson. |
|
And so scorning the whole idea of competition just because it can backfire in a tiny minority feels reflexive and unnecessary. |
|
This Israel-Hamas war feels different, neither turtle nor scorpion even pretending anymore about seeking peace. |
|
I say wheeze because every generation feels the need to reinvent a graduated state pension, much as it reinvents the grammar school and the nuclear deterrent. |
|
But unlike the epic drama of the 2000 debacle, this result feels like the big British dither. |
|
She feels a special kinship to other senators from rural states, especially John Thune and John Barrasso. |
|
After checking out a few more varieties, she lands on one that feels close enough to home. |
|
Phil goes through so much to lose his selfishness, to put self aside, that his redemption feels earned. |
|
I ask whether he feels under pressure remaking a solid gold classic. |
|
|
I can appreciate that a child can be too young too see such sexual content, bad language and violence but if a parent feels otherwise they should decide. |
|
Your novel spans 150 years, but given the drawdown in Afghanistan it feels particularly pertinent to the present day. |
|
As she slowly ambles back to her own home, she feels betrayed somehow. |
|
Miss Ophelia goes to Marie and tells her that Rosa is very sorry for her fault and that she feels a lashing from a whipping house is too harsh a punishment. |
|
When Cal overhears his father plotting, he feels like Jim Hawkins eavesdropping on John Silver and the pirates planning mutiny. |
|
Mr. Knightley reprimands her for this behavior, and she feels terrible. |
|
If you've had one of these experiences, then you've probably had a glimpse of how it feels to have a fully developed amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. |
|
Mayhew, despite the most pedantic anatomization of the condition and variety of street-sweepers, rarely feels obliged to allude to what is actually being swept. |
|
It will undoubtedly get people dancing but it feels something of a lazy effort from the Queen of Pop, especially since she built a career out of being an innovator. |
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I say throwaway because their inclusion feels like an afterthought, the result of a series of reshoots deemed necessary after early prints were found to be far too draining. |
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Luckily, the chemistry between the romantic leads feels real. |
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The experience is intended to emulate being taken hostage, which feels strange in these very real ISIS horror-drenched times. |
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Looking at Tony Bevan's work almost makes your own neck ache, such is the empathy one feels with the contorted angles and distorted structures of his heads. |
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She feels chilly, even with the pink angora sweater she is wearing. |
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Twiddling a needle in these special points helps to identify the right spot, as a trained acupuncturist feels a tiny responsive tug on the needle. |
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It feels like a sufficiently meaningful and enjoyable activity that you might pursue it in your leisure time. |
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For a moment, it feels like I'm back in a university lecture theatre. |
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It feels like a fresh start now that we have got cows calving again. |
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The ending is not only anticlimactic, it feels like a slap in the face. |
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Only this is to be reverenced in the rational being, that he feels and acts as a member of a transcendental realm, while recognizing that he can know only the world of nature. |
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In the years since, Alford has worked hard to excavate what she really feels. |
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This organization feels that at a time when all countries are tightening their citizenship laws after the Sept 11 attack, India is thinking in the reverse direction. |
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The Sopranos star's new theatrical role as an ex-con already feels legendary. |
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There is the timing, the comparisons to exes and an overwhelming feeling that nothing feels the way it should. |
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I know that working towards a PhD means sacrifices, and in my current position it feels that I have definitely sacrificed too much without getting the rewards in return. |
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It was one of the first novels of extraterrestrial invasion ever written, and it still feels fresh to readers today. |
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The victim herself feels otherwise, faulting herself for not being able to convey the enormity of what happened. |
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Olivia feels a lightness in her chest, as if a weight has been removed. |
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Apart from the apparent likeness to Harrison, who lost his battle with cancer in 2001, Nick feels his voice also bears a striking similarity to the late musician. |
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The 2014 midterm elections are just months behind us, but already flake feels the pressure of the 2016 presidential elections. |
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Water the plant when the soil surface feels dry to a light touch. |
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Gender fluid people may have dynamic or fluctuating understandings of their gender, moving between categories as feels right. |
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Nevertheless, it looks, feels and sounds silky, and is simplicity itself. |
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At the same time, despite its littleness, it really feels like a real car. |
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It feels dated and it keeps us at arm's length from the violence. |
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It feels dated, the staff far too fussy, and for the money you can do a lot better. |
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But conservatism now feels a lot like liberalism did in 1984 and 1985, back when I was futilely shoveling away that snow. |
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In fact, the car feels solid from tip to toe, from the thick doors to the low-slung seats and including the nicely cushioned stalks on the steering column. |
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The most traumatic moment arrives when the younger brother feels obliged to disavow his mentally handicapped older brother, from shame, in a schoolyard fight. |
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The visual imagination is gauntly beautiful, but none of it feels particularly terrifying. |
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