Adding to what Patrick said a moment ago, no parent should have to bury a child, and one has to sympathize with him in that respect. |
|
I can sympathize with his absolutist view regarding capital punishment, as did many in the Cuban leadership. |
|
How fortunate for him that Dobby is so clownish than no one need sympathize with him, much less identify with him. |
|
And I sympathize with the state and with the governor, and I definitely do not envy his decision to do this. |
|
Several travelled long journeys to pay their respects and sympathize with the family. |
|
You have an infinite capacity for understanding people's problems and you can sympathize with them. |
|
But if Mr. Grace failed to sympathize with the harum-scarums, he nonetheless managed them well. He was quite a disciplinarian. |
|
I can sympathize with the struggle of the poor and the oppressed against the rule of the wealthy and the so-called privileged. |
|
Without them, an audience would be hard pressed to sympathize with Walter without their reactions descending into pity. |
|
Initially, we sympathize with him in his battles with his antagonistic neighbours and their unreasonable demands. |
|
I certainly sympathize with someone that has to deal with someone who is brain dead and kept alive by machines. |
|
Despite the inconvenience, many sympathize with the strikers and public reception to the strike has been positive. |
|
His personal testimony let them sympathize with otherwise faceless, storyless soldiers. |
|
Excessive harshness may alienate readers, and make them sympathize with your adversaries. |
|
It's tempting to dismiss them altogether as pushovers, but I also sympathize with their outsider pathos. |
|
Asked to identify and sympathize with him as the show's hero, viewers must confront a series of contradictions. |
|
Lee said that as an Aborigine, he could sympathize with the Hakka people's status as a minority group. |
|
It is unfortunate that most people are not in a position to come into contact, let alone sympathize, with radical musical ideas. |
|
We humans are inclined to sympathize with attractive people, which is why satirists often paint their targets in hideous garb. |
|
I'm the baby of my family too and I can sympathize on the younger cousin deal. |
|
|
Beyond this, I can sympathize with the need for strong female role models in a male-dominated world. |
|
She was quick to sympathize and usually only a sob story could sway her vote unless the teller seemed too pathetic to her. |
|
I therefore generally sympathize with schools' judgment calls in this area, even if they may seem excessive. |
|
We sympathize with each of their stories, but once the truth is revealed, we're put in a difficult and uncomfortable position. |
|
Movies have recognizable characters, people we can identify and sympathize with. |
|
Sometimes I feel cursed because I see and sympathize with so many sides of so many housing debates. |
|
I sympathize with the university's position, assuming that their reason for saying no is candid. |
|
The pair ham up their villainous parts while Nelson and the boys play it straight, confounding the audience about who to sympathize with. |
|
A lot of the Czech supporters or people who sympathize with the cause were outstanding. |
|
I sympathize with Mr. Barbera's desire to see the place survive and not be replaced by a big Public Storage complex. |
|
In both cases, I strongly sympathize with the authors' respective messages. |
|
As a libertarian, I tend to sympathize with this logic without digging too deeply into the facts. |
|
Boshra feels that most senior editors sympathize with the reporters' sentiments, but have more to lose if they speak out. |
|
Even many who sympathize with his concerns find his combative style haughty and unforgiving. |
|
However, Shinn has created a very believable future and characters that I could sympathize with. |
|
Not only do we accept them, but we sympathize with their actions because we identify with aspects of their personalities. |
|
Although we understand Aileen's reasoning, we neither sympathize nor empathize with her. |
|
He rejects the attitude that if you try to explain the origins of terrorism you support it or sympathize with it. |
|
I sympathize with this stance, but I just don't think we're likely to attain this goal via war. |
|
Great advice givers understand where their friends are coming from and can sympathize with their friends' feelings. |
|
|
However much I sympathize with your situation, I have to clarify your picture of the Bulgarian electricity sector. |
|
You can sympathize with all of the film's intentions while wishing for more objective, nuanced arguments. |
|
And you can sometimes sympathize with a person for feeling a certain pressure. |
|
For the record, I think those laws are stupid, although I sympathize with their intent. |
|
One of the main reasons they have risen to such prominence is the fact that the police are at best indifferent to them and, at worst, actively sympathize. |
|
Meanwhile, every American who believes in racial equality and human dignity should sympathize with the rioters, not with the effete bigots on the Seine. |
|
We all yearn for some sort of control over our fate and our lives, and we can all sympathize with that. |
|
There is no one to sympathize for their war trauma and most would like nothing more than to forget. |
|
The Arab Spring is a scary time for people who sympathize with the residents of the Middle East and Northern Africa. |
|
De Blasio said he could sympathize, pulling an inhaler from inside his suit coat. |
|
He concluded by ranting against right-wing ideology, intimating that somehow Canadians do not sympathize with this. |
|
The first step in curing school avoidance syndrome is to sympathize but be firm: Tell your child he must go to school. |
|
I empathize and sympathize with the Canadian taxpayers because it is unacceptable that their dollars are mismanaged in such a callous manner. |
|
A sincere and open conversationalist who exudes good will, soulful warmth and tenderness of feeling and is able to listen and to sympathize. |
|
When I thought about Jesus' crucifixion, I was able to sympathize how painful it was. |
|
People feel sorry for you, sympathize with you, help solve your problems, or do your work for you. |
|
All members here certainly sympathize with those whose loved ones have been victims of violent crime. |
|
I can only sympathize with the animal rights advocates who, like us, were seeing a great opportunity to completely overhaul this old legislation. |
|
While we sympathize with the difficulties, we think it is important to develop a target for absenteeism. |
|
I sympathize with the Somali nationals who constitute more than 95 per cent of aid workers in south and central Somalia. |
|
|
As such, I can certainly understand and sympathize with your farmers who are suffering the effects of drought. |
|
As this big tree, we must work for others and help them and sympathize with them. |
|
Her parents need to recognize the signs and to sympathize with her condition. |
|
As such, they tend to sympathize with the political aspirations and grievances of minorities and ethnic groups living in their constituencies. |
|
We therefore sympathize and fully support the central objective of the draft resolution under consideration. |
|
I sympathize with the cry of despair we have just heard about the consequences of press freedom in certain African countries. |
|
I support that fight, of course, and sympathize, but, sheesh, come on now. |
|
Then a kind of Stockholm syndrome comes into play, a survival mechanism that leads presidential appointees to defend and sympathize with their bureaucratic captors. |
|
First off, I wanted to tell his son that I can really sympathize with him. |
|
There will be no one in the world who will sympathize with us. |
|
I can totally understand and sympathize with both sides of this argument. |
|
It turns out that even Vermont peaceniks didn't sympathize with his views. |
|
You may not entirely sympathize with his auto-hypnotic perturbation of mind, but you certainly feel like you've been a little hypnotized yourself. |
|
Who cannot sympathize with this intense desire of an infertile couple? |
|
To replace anxious mistrust with greater insights into one another's cultures and aspirations, is to help us learn to sympathize with one another, and prepare the way for lasting peace. |
|
I assume that over the course of the day your discussions will come back to CPF's resources-both your funding and workforce-and I sympathize with the difficulties you face. |
|
And the couple said they can sympathize with the Houston couple who recently had octuplets. |
|
I sympathize with the people who are affected by this business decision and regret that families in these communities will be negatively impacted. |
|
To Arafat these concerns were intensified when he found that many European and even Arab leaders did not sympathize with his scepticism about the Camp David approach. |
|
Though not to sympathize with their cause might seem heartless, on a point of principle the Homolka-Bernardo crimes raised as yet unanswered concerns about the accountability of the criminal justice system. |
|
|
We can sympathize with the inhabitants of those areas who are held hostage to an ideology of hate and death, because we too are held hostage to Lebanon's failure. |
|
It can be helpful for the person who has experienced the trauma to know that his or her family members sympathize with him or her, especially just after the traumatic event occurs. |
|
Neither party has the benefit of discovery and I can sympathize with a Respondent who is forced to defend against a case which is largely unknown to it. |
|
I get it and sympathize with them and try to be there for the fans. |
|
Although we may sympathize with an employee's unique personal circumstances and their reasons for why they are not performing, it is important to remain focused on the performance issue. |
|
I'm very sympathetic to many of her goals, but I was thinking of Mrs. Albright, my old friend from graduate school, who has done quite well for herself and is a very intelligent woman, who I sympathize with. |
|
Many an entrepreneur, sitting alone in his office at midnight, worried about meeting his payroll and how to fatten next month's thin order book, will sympathize with that sentiment. |
|
Second, given cultural, linguistic, and often religious differences between colonizers and colonized, the colonizers are unlikely to sympathize with the native peoples and are likely to act tyrannically. |
|
After a violent confrontation, they sympathize and eventually make love. |
|
The fact that most of us sympathize with the poor souls who can't control themselves presents a temptation to people who can to jump on the bandwagon. |
|
One would think, Ehrenreich suggests, that the largely working-class, multiracial crowd might sympathize with the working stiff on the plane who happened to be African-American. |
|
The mind will sympathize so much with the anguish and debility of the body, that it will be too distracted to fix itself in meditation. |
|
But since unions barred them from membership, Chinese workers had no reason to sympathize with these organizations or to show solidarity when they went on strike. |
|
The army may sympathize with the Taliban in the same way as the civilian population and this support might increase, depending on how the military operation in Afghanistan develops. |
|
Love means to sympathize with others, with their sorrow and suffering. |
|
While we sympathize with the calls for fair burden-sharing when it comes to illegals, Europe faces a bigger immigration problem if Frontex is handicapped by political squabbles. |
|