22. feel
- I couldn't feel anger against him.
- A second group are those parents who feel that they were too harsh.
- The student should feel that the essay belongs to him or her.
- His friend looked as miserable as he felt himself.
- She felt in charge of her own affairs.
- Health and education are matters that most voters feel strongly about.
- I feel cold.
- ...her tight, pale-green felt cape.
- He made me feel like a complete idiot.
- We felt hot, tired, and thirsty.
- He still feels like a child.
- It's a fairly common feeling.
- He began to feel utterly miserable.
- Her hand felt different from David's.
- We feel quite differently about each of our children.
- He could hardly have felt more of a fool than he did at that moment.
- I feel a bit of a fraud.
- I don't want the Jews to feel I've slighted them.
- Come and see me whenever you feel depressed.
- She felt her grip tightening.
- Then he felt himself being snatched upright and shoved roughly across a flat space.
- She felt her hair rise on the back of her neck.
- I do feel sorry for Roger.
- How are you feeling today?
- How did you feel when you stood up in front of the class?
- Marsha rarely felt hungry.
- I felt that I would like to wake her up.
- The farmer will feel more responsible towards his workers.
- You will not feel much love for him at the moment.
- I could feel my heart bumping.
- He could hardly have felt more ashamed of himself.
- I don't feel British anymore. Not as much as I used to.
- I feel heavy. I do. I feel drowsy.
- I'm already feeling tense.
- She's always felt that films should be entertaining.
- I've made some poor decisions lately, but I'm feeling much better now.
- The drive increased the fatigue she had been feeling for hours.
- What does it show us that we haven't already felt?
- For the first time Anne Marie felt frightened.
- It took me a month to lose that feeling of being a spectator.
- Sometimes I feel that anywhere, just anywhere, would be better than this.
- He felt that he had to do something.
- He didn't know whether to feel glad or sorry at his dismissal.
- I felt I should consult my family.
- I feel better now I've talked to you.
- He never says a word unless he feels he's being threatened in some way.
- No matter how I'm playing, I always get that special feeling.
- I couldn't feel anger against him because I liked him too much.
- He feels himself to be dependent to the extent that he is not free to question decisions affecting his daily life.
- She felt as if she had a fever.
- I felt as if I were the centre of the universe.
- Sometimes you may feel too frail too cope with things, in which case do them as soon as it is convenient.
- He pranced about, feeling very important indeed.
- Feeling a little foolish, Pluskat hung up.
- I did not feel terribly shocked, having expected him to take the easiest way out.
- About twice a month, enough evidence having accumulated, the police would feel obliged to stage a raid.
- I'm only 63, but I feel a hundred.
- I want to leave, and yet I feel obliged to stay.
- I felt that the new plant should bear his name, for he, not I, had done the work.
- Call me if you feel lonely or depressed.
- They feel both anxiety and joy.
- I felt not jubilation but sadness.
- Guy had studied classics and philosophy at Oxford and always felt a sort of lingering interest in the latter subject.
- People will feel the need to be informed and they will go wherever they can to get this information.
- I hated the big formal dances and felt very awkward and out of place at the one or two such events I attended.
- `How do you feel?'*`Strange.'
- It was felt that there had been some duplication of effort.
- There seem to be fewer men around to whom I feel I ought to defer. By the same token, there are more and more men who come to me for advice.
- I know just how you feel.
- It had always been felt that foster parents should make no profit*the job should be done for love alone.