He gathered her against him, felt that she was as cold as ice as well, and held on to her tightly. |
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Did it actually cause misandry in real life? Some reviewers, referring to misandric jokes and sitcoms, asked a few of their male friends or colleagues if they felt threatened. |
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She felt that she had made a virtuous decision by donating the money to charity. |
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He felt the only way to emancipate himself from his parents was to move away. |
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They felt it was necessary to expurgate his letters before publishing them. |
|
He could not escape the guilt that he felt in the inner recesses of his soul. |
|
He had told us he felt nervous about the performance, but he seemed perfectly composed when he walked onto the stage. |
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He felt that there were many unasked questions after his demonstration. |
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She felt they had insulted her by repeatedly ignoring her questions. |
|
We felt like a bunch of hicks when we went to the city for the first time. |
|
I felt a kind of exhilaration when I reached the top of the mountain. |
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She remembered her terrible foredream of the sack of Turbansk and felt a suffocating despair rising in her breast. |
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He never felt any affinity with the other kids in his neighborhood. |
|
The corporation's tentacles are felt in every sector of the industry. |
|
He felt the familiar prickle of excitement as the game began. |
|
He felt that he had been manipulated by the people he trusted most. |
|
The instructions were so complicated I felt like a complete simpleton. |
|
She ignored their threats and continued to do what she felt was right. |
|
The plays themselves were in a version that Johnson felt was closest to the original, based on his analysis of the manuscript editions. |
|
After leaving he felt unable to write to her or read her letters, although he did correspond with her mother. |
|
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She also felt ostracised by those who, like Sir Timothy, still disapproved of her relationship with Percy Bysshe Shelley. |
|
On the Sunday morning she felt weaker and asked if she could be taken back to Haworth. |
|
No contemporary letters or diaries describe how Austen felt about this proposal. |
|
And I had not known you a month before I felt that you were the last man in the world whom I could ever be prevailed on to marry. |
|
Hardy never felt at home in London, because he was acutely conscious of class divisions and his social inferiority. |
|
Lawrence felt all poems had to be personal sentiments, and that a sense of spontaneity was vital. |
|
Blyton felt she had a responsibility to provide her readers with a strong moral framework, so she encouraged them to support worthy causes. |
|
Blyton felt a responsibility to provide her readers with a positive moral framework, and she encouraged them to support worthy causes. |
|
Huxley had deeply felt apprehensions about the future the developed world might make for itself. |
|
She did so and then signed a contract which she later felt was exploitative. |
|
His physical body felt like a meatsuit compared to the lightness he had just known. |
|
By September, however, he was furious at Cumberland's negotiated settlement, which he felt greatly favoured the French. |
|
Although he was in demand as a festival composer, he was only just getting by financially and felt unappreciated. |
|
By May 1935, Jelka felt she had enough strength to undertake the crossing to attend a reburial in England. |
|
He seemed to make a good recovery, and he felt up to accepting an invitation to the US, lecturing and conducting at the University of Michigan. |
|
He felt intellectually overshadowed by some of his companions, but he learned much from them and formed lifelong friendships with several. |
|
Waters felt that Gilmour had contributed little to the band's lyrical repertoire. |
|
O'Rourke felt obliged to inform Mason and Gilmour, which angered Waters, who wanted to dismiss him as the band's manager. |
|
Bulsara felt that he and the band had the same tastes and soon became a keen fan of Smile. |
|
The rest of the band were ready to record when Mercury felt able to come into the studio, for an hour or two at a time. |
|
|
His elder brother was already a pupil, and Olivier gradually settled in, though he felt himself to be something of an outsider. |
|
Lauded for her beauty, Leigh felt that her physical attributes sometimes prevented her from being taken seriously as an actress. |
|
Myron Selznick also represented Olivier and when he met Leigh, he felt that she possessed the qualities that his brother was searching for. |
|
Gielgud, for his part, felt he learned much about film technique from Mason. |
|
The script I felt was banal and 'who cares' and 'why bother' and all of that. |
|
Lead actress Anny Ondra was raised in Prague and had a heavy Czech accent that was felt unsuitable for the film. |
|
By 1967 many in the LSO felt that Fleischmann was seeking to exert too much influence on the affairs of the orchestra, and he resigned. |
|
I felt as if I didn't say anything, and then we started to lose that option, it would be a shame. |
|
And if I felt I could do the same again, then absolutely I would consider doing another one. |
|
The considerable loss felt by the English literary community at his death was evident from the elegies that it inspired. |
|
As of 2011 the ICC outlawed the use of runners as they felt this was being abused. |
|
Modern tennis balls are made of hollow vulcanized rubber with a felt coating. |
|
Some observers, however, also felt that Kramer deserved consideration for the title. |
|
Winning times had improved to such a degree that many felt further improvement by adding additional Arabian bloodlines was impossible. |
|
It is generally felt that British professional boxing is in decline in the early years of the 21st century. |
|
The Africans felt that winning their zone was enough in itself to merit qualification for the finals. |
|
Although this tactic was widely felt by commentators to be against the spirit of the game there was no legal stipulation against it. |
|
It was felt that such an event would cause drunkenness, rioting, lewd behaviour, and that men would leave their wives. |
|
Although nothing strictly illegal had been done, it was felt that the acceptance of the gifts was morally dubious. |
|
This was popularly felt to be an appropriate recompense for the previous national disgrace involving Ben Johnson. |
|
|
Mike felt that during 2004, he was able to return but the club blocked his return to work. |
|
Referee Jose Guadalupe Garcia felt Lewis was unable to continue and ended the fight, giving McCall the title by technical knockout. |
|
There was a lot on his shoulders, but I always felt he could rise to the big occasion. |
|
Some observers felt it was a hometown robbery as Peterson is from Washington DC, while many felt that Khan wasn't treat fairly. |
|
There was significant controversy as many observers felt that referee Howard Foster stepped in to end the contest prematurely. |
|
In an interview with the BBC Hamilton, said that he had been to the stewards five races out of six thus far in the season and felt victimised. |
|
They felt the new contract signed in the summer for Honda to supply engines to BAR was not definitive, and thus Button was free to move. |
|
Carl felt insulted by the mickey-taking and gave Jamie the dirtiest of looks before he kicked off. |
|
But at the time, I felt it was the price you paid for getting something significantly better. |
|
Players felt that the BDO was no longer serving the interests of the game at the top level. |
|
O'Sullivan apologised for his conduct with the referee, stating that he felt unwell on the day and that the venue was overly warm. |
|
Ainslie felt the photographer's boat's wake had prevented him from passing a competitor. |
|
Without this guarantee, they would not reduce armaments because they felt the risk of attack from Germany was too great. |
|
The SNP decided to withdraw as they felt that independence would not be a constitutional option countenanced by the convention. |
|
In many societies, such as the USSR, the distribution lead to anger, as it was felt too equal, unfair. |
|
By March, Greene's army had grown to the point where he felt that he could face Cornwallis directly. |
|
Lastly, the British felt disenchanted with Indian reaction to social change. |
|
After Benjamin senior died in 1816 Isaac felt free to leave the congregation following a second dispute. |
|
Despite this tragedy, and the need for treatment for a sexually transmitted disease on his return, Disraeli felt enriched by his experiences. |
|
Disraeli wanted the power a majority would bring, and felt he could gain it later by leaving the Liberals in office now. |
|
|
This article became known as War Guilt clause as the majority of Germans felt humiliated and resentful. |
|
Hitler felt that abstract, Dadaist, expressionist, and modern art were decadent, an opinion that became the basis for policy. |
|
When news of the sinking reached the US, few shipping companies felt truly safe anywhere. |
|
The administration felt that the plan would likely be unpopular among many Americans, and the speech was mainly directed at a European audience. |
|
Torlesse was supposed to accompany him, but in view of the degree of radioactive contamination, he felt he could not leave his command. |
|
Both the French and the British felt that Nasser should be removed from power. |
|
Modernism remains a significant force in UK architecture, although its influence is felt predominantly in commercial buildings. |
|
He would have felt like an irate ticket-holder at a prize-fight where the principals refused to mix it up. |
|
The aftermath of the decisive Battle of Culloden, which effectively ended Jacobite hopes of a Stuart restoration, was widely felt. |
|
After the referendum Gibraltar's Government increasingly felt it could demand a say in its future in any talks with Spain. |
|
Brookeborough, despite having felt that Craigavon had held on to power for too long, was Prime Minister for one year longer. |
|
Initially all field officers were Royal Navy officers as the Royal Navy felt that the ranks of Marine field officers were largely honorary. |
|
When Tima felt like her parents were treating her like a servant, she would speak in monotone and act as though she were a robot. |
|
They felt the French would encourage their tribal allies among the North American natives to attack them. |
|
They also felt better moodwise, which was unrelated to their improved attention. |
|
However, until the Stonewall riots, this community had felt marginalized and neglected by the gay community. |
|
Robert felt that his reports to London were being ignored, as heavy equipment continued to be sent. |
|
Differences between the dialects make themselves felt in stress, intonation, vocabulary and structural features. |
|
She hated her flat hair and her muffin top that spilled ever so slightly from her jeans, and she had felt increasingly uninspired at work. |
|
Both characters feel themselves in trouble, and there was speculation that Alan Ayckbourn himself may have felt himself to be in trouble. |
|
|
Years later he came to regret not going to university, but at the time he loved his work as a journalist and felt passionately about his career. |
|
But Richardson still felt the need to respond by writing a pamphlet called Answer to the Letter of a Very Reverend and Worthy Gentleman. |
|
I've always like that, and it's shaped everything I've felt that I've done. |
|
After initial reluctance, Fleming, who felt the strips would lack the quality of his writing, agreed. |
|
He declined, not least because he felt he had long since ceased to be a writer of poetry in a meaningful sense. |
|
Moore felt that he was not being fulfilled by this job, and so decided to try to earn a living doing something more artistic. |
|
When I was working on Sandman, I felt a lot of the time that I was actually picking up a machete and heading out into the jungle. |
|
Doyle felt grievously exploited by Ward Lock as an author new to the publishing world and he left them. |
|
I have many times felt pity for the river Alyn at the point where it loses itself in the Dee. |
|
On the evening of 27 October Thomas attended his 39th birthday party but felt unwell and returned to his hotel after an hour. |
|
Along with the rest of Europe the effects of the French Revolution were felt in Wales. |
|
Pater argued that man's sensibility to beauty should be refined above all else, and that each moment should be felt to its fullest extent. |
|
Throughout almost his entire life Conrad was an outsider and felt himself to be one. |
|
He loved New York but felt the city was threatened by commercialism and vulgarity, and he no longer felt at home there. |
|
She had little interest in raising a child, but may have felt that having one would maintain her connection to him. |
|
Gilbert eventually won the lawsuit and felt vindicated, but his actions and statements had been hurtful to his partners. |
|
When that event occurred, I saw no one with whom I felt that I could work with satisfaction and success, and so I discontinued to write libretti. |
|
Some younger players felt that many BBC SO principals were past their best. |
|
Following a campaign of protest in New York he felt unable to take up the appointment. |
|
Some reviewers felt that the story and dialogue were weak, while the visuals were spectacular. |
|
|
The release drew criticism from musicians including Lily Allen and Kim Gordon, who felt the release undercut less successful acts. |
|
McLeod later contacted Noel Gallagher claiming he felt he had made the wrong decision. |
|
The group felt insecure about the lack of a contract and was frustrated by the direction in which Heart Management was steering them. |
|
Winehouse's bodyguard said that he had arrived at her residence three days before her death and felt she had been somewhat intoxicated. |
|
He declined, asserting that he felt unqualified, knowing little about scholarship on the theory of poetry. |
|
She made a plaster cast of the interior of a wooden wardrobe and covered it with black felt. |
|
Herbert Coleman, Vertigo's associate producer and a frequent collaborator with Hitchcock, felt the removal was a mistake. |
|
Glenville, however, rejected him as he felt that Burton was too short compared to Scofield. |
|
Additionally, DiCaprio said there was no point when he felt he was in danger during filming. |
|
Hume, I felt, was perfectly right in pointing out that induction cannot be logically justified. |
|
These he felt were completely unverifiable through empirical demonstration and logical analysis. |
|
By returning to his study of economics, Marx felt he would be able to understand more thoroughly what was occurring in the world. |
|
He had lost faith in Russell, finding him glib and his philosophy mechanistic, and felt he had fundamentally misunderstood the Tractatus. |
|
There has been only one time that I felt narced and strangley it was in 127 of water. |
|
Is it a myth that you shouldn't drink alcohol while taking antibiotics? I often do and haven't felt remotely nauseous. |
|
About 37,000 earthquakes are recorded each year, but most are too small to be felt. |
|
Powerful local nobles turned their cities, counties and duchies into private kingdoms, that felt little sense of obligation to the emperor. |
|
Significant additional effects were also felt around the world in the days and weeks after the volcano's destruction. |
|
While I was astrally projecting, I felt my soul pass through many insubstantial netherworlds. |
|
He felt a lump in his throat and a hotness in his eyes as he thought of the neverness of her. |
|
|
Shortly after Knox sent the letter to the Queen Regent, he suddenly announced that he felt his duty was to return to Geneva. |
|
By March, Greene's army had grown enough where he felt confident in facing Cornwallis. |
|
Whitehouse still felt able to ignore Thomson's many suggestions and proposals. |
|
This article became known as the War Guilt clause as the majority of Germans felt humiliated and resentful. |
|
Rawlinson had wanted to end the offensive after the first day and Haig felt that reserves should have been committed quicker. |
|
Haig felt that they would take credit for Foch's victory but might dismiss him if disaster befell the British forces. |
|
The effects of the Viasystems closure are still felt in the Scottish Borders today. |
|
Although the last glacial period ended more than 8,000 years ago, its effects can still be felt today. |
|
Pierre Bayle, a Reformed Frenchman, also felt safer in the Netherlands than in his home country. |
|
George VI felt that the Orders of the Garter and the Thistle had been used only for political patronage, rather than to reward actual merit. |
|
As such some early scholars felt that the legal system was essentially unchanging and archaic. |
|
The violin is also considered a very expressive instrument, which is often felt to approximate the human voice. |
|
Gallo was felt as a wrong way of speaking French more than as a proper dialect or language. |
|
None lasses were in the dunces' row. If one had been there people would have looked at her and felt sorry but not boys. |
|
This caused a deal of upset, as many young men wanted to join the fighting forces and felt that as miners they would not be valued. |
|
As a defensive move, the other coalition, Olive Tree, felt obliged to do the same, under the name Paese Nuovo. |
|
In one hand he carried a lantern, in the other a noosed rope, and he felt his way carefully. |
|
As a result, Latin Americans export industries felt the depression quickly. |
|
Many felt that these world shops were too disconnected from the rhythm and the lifestyle of contemporary developed societies. |
|
However, the impact of the state was felt through natural forces, and it varied over time. |
|
|
During the 1940s Surrealism's influence was also felt in England and America. |
|
Those of us who didn't want OBHWF felt that Rowling was making a mistake, not that she was being misleading. |
|
Someone jolted my arm and the contents of my glass spilled onto an immaculate white dress. I felt obnoxious. |
|
Twenty clubs agreed to resign from the Rugby Football Union, but Dewsbury felt unable to comply with the decision. |
|
It's been a long time coming but I've kept working hard and I felt that in the end the results would come. |
|
Some individuals had felt that Welsh had embraced America too much, and had undertaken too many 'Yankee' mannerisms, forgetting his home country. |
|
The Esperanto Society played a significant part in the first year when it was felt that there could be a shortage of participants. |
|
Matthews later explained that while she had liked the songs on the EP, she felt that she wasn't good at performing live at the time. |
|
But in the past eight months, I hadn't felt even a tremor of oneitis. In fact, every woman I met seemed disposable and replaceable. |
|
This was illustrated by Reginald Payne, whom Wilbert felt to be a great improvement over Middleton. |
|
At that time the Corsican people felt that the French government did not support them. |
|
Many thousands of years ago, an Africoon was loafing in the dust in front of his hut when he felt the need for a snack. |
|
Combe felt her bumps and pronounced that she had an unusually large cerebellum, the seat of Amativeness. |
|
Whether one's surroundings were anticked up or not, one often felt one was living in another century at Roque. |
|
The next thing I laid hold of was a brace of pistols, and as I already had a powder horn and bullets, I felt myself well supplied with arms. |
|
I felt dizzy and fainting at places, but I still made it to the finish line. |
|
I had to admit he had nice fingernails and a backscratch would have felt just fine. |
|
He felt better for a little while, before his condition started to backslide. |
|
A little bedrunken, we delved into the analysis of what it felt like to talk to my old boyfiend, now a candidate for governor. |
|
Rachel came in, and Nick felt he'd been caught larking about, Catherine squashing him like some bolshie teenage attempt at seduction. |
|
|
I swallowed hard, and I felt my ears beginning to burn. You know why? It was because of her boosies. |
|
It was then that Bim felt what was, for him, a very rare sensation. He was irritated. |
|
In spite of reading all the materials on the Steps, talking to my sponsor, sharing at meetings, I felt like a broken record. |
|
Brooding over all these matters, the mother felt like one who has evoked a spirit. |
|
This happens through a demedication and deconditioning process and being deeply felt by our facilitator. |
|
They felt very sorry for the poor old eleventh company having been buncoed into taking such an awful pack of useless recruits. |
|
They were quite bunglesome working together initially, and she didn't understand why. Sometimes she felt uncomfortable. |
|
All ye that, as I do, have felt this smart, Ye know how burthensome 'tis at my heart. |
|
Financier as he was, he felt it was not right by a by-stroke or side-wind to alter what is a matter of high constitutional practice. |
|
Passengers who felt sick, as well as their cabinmates, were asked to remain in their rooms for 24 hours. |
|
On this particular day, I felt ill, mostly from exhaustion, and had to call out from work. This callout caused a stir and a display of animosity. |
|
As a public defender, Jonas had a crushing caseload and never felt that he could prepare his clients' defenses properly. |
|
He was happily picking up cashewnuts when he felt a hot burning sensation on his leg. |
|
None of which he grudged, for he felt, like his father the third Baron, that one should never cheesepare on boys' education. |
|
I too felt that the government has not made judicious use of its powers to curb the felling of chinars. |
|
The guard entered the room and before I knew it Sarah had left, I felt gutted and a broken man. |
|
The whole platoon had felt gutted, an attitude rarely reflected in press reporters. |
|
I felt they expected me to say clever things, and I never could think of any till after the party was over. |
|
However, my mother, who had been at the coalface of the marital collapse, felt the need to have an in-depth debrief. |
|
Though it was now sovereign, the country still felt the after-effects of colonyhood. |
|
|
The Bavarian felt a mad wave of desire for her sweep over him. What scheme wouldn't he compass to mould that girl to his wishes. |
|
But he felt, later, a little compunction. He had been violent, cruel with poor Hermione. He wanted to recompense her, to make it up. |
|
I felt no compunction in doing so, for under the circumstances I felt that I should protect myself in every way I could. |
|
As we were the only people in the room to laugh at the joke, I felt a connection between us. |
|
The mischievous pleasure of her coquetries was forgotten, and in a rush of glad confidence she felt a woman's pride in him. |
|
Couching involves transferring the sheet of paper from the mould to the felt. |
|
The bird gave a gulp, and I felt the stone pass along its gullet and down into its crop. |
|
After crossing his palm with a donation, I felt entitled at least to ask where he was from. |
|
We were sharing a Cuban sandwich at the bar in Chez Henri. Susan felt that Riesling was appropriate with a Cuban sandwich. I was drinking beer. |
|
Nobody felt like eating, and just as well, because Kian had cup noodles and a box of tea. |
|
And time again My bluest lady fair Serenely still passed by And felt her goldlike Hair Ah! here a curlsome smile meekly awhile. |
|
Archie looked grave. He hated to to give pain, but he felt he must be honest. |
|
Not long ago, as eternity flows, most of humanity felt earthbound, sin-bound, limitation-bound, deathbound, fear-bound, and guilt-bound. |
|
We felt there was too much graphic detail in the first draft, and thus asked the writer to dial it down. |
|
My memories of high school and college French are mostly negative because I usually felt dimwitted anytime I tried to speak. |
|
He told his mother he was glad to be back again. He sometimes felt as if it were disloyal to her for him to be so happy with Mrs. Erlich. |
|
Done and done, he said to himself. And he felt pretty good. The anger and hurt that only a few hours before had been sharp and deep had dulled. |
|
He looked so sympathetic that I felt sorry about doing my block and asked him to have a whisky. |
|
I only felt like myself when I was drunk Double-fisting beer was pretty typical for me back in the day. |
|
I admit I felt a flicker of interest, if only as an excuse to avoid ever having to attempt Downward Dog again. |
|
|
I felt so drained after that three-hour exam that I wanted to sleep for the next week. |
|
If he felt obliged to expostulate, he might have dressed his censures in a kinder form. |
|
It was no good. I felt beyond all question that I was indeed Eden, not Elvesham. But Eden in Elvesham's body! |
|
After returning from the pool, Aleshia felt significantly better, though she was still slightly embarrassed. |
|
There seems to be some support here for the claim that the older group felt a greater need to euphemize in the two contexts in question. |
|
Thereafter the job of euthing was transferred to the chief medical officer, who it was felt would have less emotional involvement. |
|
Rose felt it in her bones, as Dolly says, that something was in the wind, and wanted to be off at once. |
|
In fact, precisely as a rash, restive horse is said to feel his oats, so Turkey felt his coat. |
|
I felt like a fifth wheel when they started giggling and making out during dinner. |
|
She felt she was standing in front of a fire hose of instructions, trying to absorb them all with a sponge. |
|
So if a firey was having difficulties, I could go into bat for him if I felt it was necessary. |
|
He heard the firing and as he walked he felt it in the pit of his stomach as though it echoed on his own diaphragm. |
|
The apartment felt damp, and the paint on the walls was beginning to flake off. |
|
His eyes sprang open. Umegat stared straight at him for the fraction of a second, and Cazaril felt flensed. |
|
Even after the acrimonious breakup, she still felt flickerings of love for him. |
|
The invitation for the next evening was accepted, and Cecilia, for once, felt no repugnance to joining the company. |
|
That's how she pictured him, her French lover, like the deepest kiss that she had ever felt. She who had never French kissed. |
|
I felt a frisson just as they were about to announce the winner in my category. |
|
Whenever the villain's theme played in the movie I felt a sudden frisson down my back. |
|
The beginning of this contemplation may be felt in this life, but the fullhead of it is kept until the bliss of heaven. |
|
|
The cotton grower felt delight at the gainsome expansion of his cotton fields. |
|
Her teeth sank into his lips, he felt the sweet galbe of her flanks and arching back. |
|
She hated the poisoned feeling in her throat, and no matter how often she gargled she felt unclean and disgusting. |
|
The gaslit streets of Victorian London felt much safer than the dark alleyways to either side. |
|
As a relative novice to computing, I felt a little diffident joining this august geekly company, but they were most welcoming. |
|
He felt elated. Till now he had been living too much in the past, he decided. Time to get my eye in again. |
|
The giantess picked him up and gave him such a squeeze that he felt he was going to choke. |
|
Terry agreed because he felt it was a little far out and, as I was reminded, Terry wanted to stay clear of things that seemed too Gilliamesque. |
|
Moving very slowly, taking extremely ginger steps, the woman felt beads of sweat dripping down from her body. |
|
It must have been a while since I've attended a fancy, glitzy event, because as soon as I got to the GQ awards I felt like something was up. |
|
He sighed at the Goldilocks temperature. Jane might think different, but this felt perfect to him. |
|
Erhard presumably felt it was no time to give his enemies grounds for charging him with gumming up relations with France. |
|
Jake felt that rat feeling again and the gut shot realization that he'd gotten Greg killed. |
|
The half-term trip to Nethercombe had to be postponed because of her funeral and John felt a new guilt. |
|
This foreign visitor asked me how I felt about the war, and I told him that it was over, and I bore no hard feelings. |
|
He was in that headstrong teenage phase when he felt like he knew everything. |
|
And, therefore, what is more healful than the sweetness of this sight, or what softer thing may be felt? |
|
The need for a common name came to be felt because of the common marine biology, geology and hydrology. |
|
Besides the emerging international policy of the European Union, the international influence of the EU is also felt through enlargement. |
|
She felt dizzy and befuddled, almost like the time she had swiped a drink of her mother's homebrewed mead. |
|
|
I'm an activist, but in Kelowna I felt like my safety is predicated on silence and white middle-class homonormativity. |
|
The immediate influence of Aristotle's work was felt as the Lyceum grew into the Peripatetic school. |
|
The instant his feet touched the cold metal floor of the storage room he felt a hot-flash pass through his body. |
|
Following Jugurtha's usurpation of the throne of Numidia, a loyal ally of Rome since the Punic Wars, Rome felt compelled to intervene. |
|
Claudius, as the author of a treatise on Augustus' religious reforms, felt himself in a good position to institute some of his own. |
|
Despite this, the employment situation in York remained fairly buoyant until the effects of the late 2000s recession began to be felt. |
|
He now felt that he could dispense with Alaric's services and he nominally transferred Alaric's province to the West. |
|
As a man of Eastern Tennessee, he also felt ill-disposed to co-operate with the men from the west. |
|
Given the low wages and high inflation in the later Empire, the soldiers felt that they had a right to acquire plunder. |
|
Still, it is important to remember that not all Englishmen were in his favour, and the burden of taxation was widely felt. |
|
William's ability to leave England for an entire year was a sign that he felt that his control of the kingdom was secure. |
|
He felt that Aquitaine was his and that John was unfit to take over the land once belonging to his beloved mother. |
|
With his northern borders secured, Edward felt free to continue his major offensive against France, laying siege to the town of Calais. |
|
He felt himself bound by no special duty, either to maintain the theory of royal supremacy or to follow a policy which would benefit his people. |
|
The Baronial Order of Magna Charta was formed in 1898 to promote the ancient principles and values felt to be displayed in Magna Carta. |
|
After the rebellion the rebels' grievances formed the basis of Richard of York's opposition of a royal government from which he felt excluded. |
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She never let anyone challenge her authority as queen, even though many people, who felt she was weak and should be married, tried to do so. |
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It has been argued that Elizabeth would have selected James because she felt guilty about what happened to his mother, her cousin. |
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The earthquake was reportedly felt as far away as Toronto, Atlanta and Florida. |
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In 1858 the Vietnamese emperor of the Nguyen Dynasty felt threatened by the French influence and tried to expel the missionaries. |
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Muldoon felt that the dissolution would be immediate and he would later introduce a bill in parliament to retroactively make the abolition legal. |
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Birmingham's sporting heritage can be felt worldwide, with the concept of the Football League and lawn tennis both originating from the city. |
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She felt herself swooping, then she was lying on the bed beside Gowan, on her back, jouncing to the dying chatter of the shucks. |
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Although the French Revolution had a dramatic impact in numerous areas of Europe, the French colonies felt a particular influence. |
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The Liberty cap, also known as the Phrygian cap, or pileus, is a brimless, felt cap that is conical in shape with the tip pulled forward. |
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Riley lowered his eyebrows and crossed his arms and tried to look non-judgy even if he felt a little judgy. |
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He was easily flattered by praise, and dismayed when he felt he was not given sufficient credit for his actions. |
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On the way to Lancaster, which was about an hour and a half from Philly, John felt the karma. |
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There was a spirit of libertarianism, says Porter, as people felt they were free. |
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The Victorians were impressed by science and progress and felt that they could improve society in the same way as they were improving technology. |
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James, view Churchill's motives as honourable and disinterested, in that he felt deeply for the King. |
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The Cypriots desired to merge with Greece because they felt a close connection with Greece. |
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A critic felt leaving patients waiting in pain longer than clinically necessary should be unacceptable. |
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Most Conservatives felt strongly that the recent alternation between the main parties ought to be maintained and a Conservative Speaker chosen. |
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MacDonald's moves aroused great anger among a large majority of Labour Party activists who felt betrayed. |
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Urban workers also felt that they had a right to greater earnings, and popular uprisings broke out across Europe. |
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The tidal bore induces a strong turbulent mixing in the estuarine zone, and the effects may be felt along considerable distances. |
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He felt it weird to have this discussion with a laugh track running faintly in the background. |
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The decision was overturned, however, as it was felt to have outstanding importance as the centre of the pottery industry. |
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It was felt that such a grant would undermine the status of the two existing cities in the capital. |
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