459 adjectives to describe emotion

Know this, that thou hast never experienced a more truly religious emotion than that which led thee to form the design of overthrowing this my temple, the abode, as thou didst deem it, of fraud and superstition.

He is a prey to violent and conflicting emotions.

" The hurried exclamation of the herald was accompanied by a general stir, such as denotes sudden and strong emotion in a multitude.

" For the Triple Alliance the remainder of the day passed in a whirl of conflicting emotions.

I cannot hide the profound emotion which I felt when Count Apponyi, on January 16, 1920, before the Supreme Council at Paris, gave the reasons of Hungary.

But when he turned to greet his neighbors, I have rarely seen such genuine emotion shown even in our whole-hearted Virginia.

It might be said to energize deeply the tender emotions, and instead of saying soft-hearted we should say much-pituitarized.

" Norgate's face showed little emotion.

'MY DEAREST FRIENDS, 'I am fully repaid for the painful emotions from which some verses of my poem sprung by your sympathy and approbation; which is all the reward I expect, and as much as I desire.

Your letters clearly showed that you wrote under the influence of an intense emotionan emotion which I can both understand and respect, but which might well make it impossible for you to accord a dispassionate reception to a reply which controverted your own views.

Edith was thrilled by the passionate emotion she felt near her.

She seemed to share in the lovers' slightest emotion.

Barbara saw the launch start, with mixed emotions.

When the coast of my own beloved country first presented itself to my view, I experienced the liveliest emotions; and I felt so anxious to see my children and friends, that I would gladly have given up all the promised pleasures of our expedition.

The exterior of them (the things themselves being so common), strange to say, raises no sweet emotions, no tickling sense of property in the owner.

The act-division positively enhances the amount of pleasurable emotion through which the audience passes.

These last, however, as well as mental emotions, often relieve a paroxysm of headach, though they favour its return afterwards.

Eating a Christmas Pie: He put in his thumb And pulled out a plum, And said, "What a brave boy am I." In Canto I, I have shown the varied emotions which seized the tender soul of Old Mother HUBBARD'S Dog.

I find my eyes wet with tears, for the beauty and the glory and the insidious danger of that intoxicating war-cry; for the blindness and the wickedness and the selfish greed that lurk behind it, exploiting the generous emotions of the young and brave; for the irony and bitter fatuity of any war-cry in a world that should be purged of war.

" During this speech, the countenance of Mr. Benfield had manifested evident emotion: he looked from one to another, until he saw Mrs. Wilson smiling near him.

It was a peculiar emotion: the first time I had ever felt the oppression of spacecan I describe it?the utter bigness of the world and the aloofness of myself, a little boy, within itnow that my father was gone.

But they do not waken in us Half the tender, blissful feeling, Half the pure and sweet emotion As the first spring-flower in April, With its lashes tinged with crimson, Partly raised from eyes half-timid, Fearful that the snow will drown it; How we love the dainty blossom, How we wear it in our bosom.

"You live a natural life, knowing bodily strain and primitive emotions.

We were silent for some minutes, my own heart oppressed with mingled emotions, all intensely painful, but so confused that, while conscious of acute suffering, I scarcely realised anything that had occurred.

When the communication was over, and the C.O., attributing the young man's silence to weakness or grateful emotion, had passed on, the nurse beside the bed saw the patient bury his head in the pillow with a queer sound of exasperation, and caught the words, "I call it perfectly childish!"

459 adjectives to describe  emotion