452 adverbs to describe how to feels

He had thought so much of her, felt her so deeply the last few days that he fancied it must somehow have reached her.

But however perfect the season and the day, the cold incompleteness of these young lakes is always keenly felt.

The bereaved husband stood a little apart, and, though no tear escaped him, yet we all instinctively felt that his heart was wrung with agony, and his burden greater than he could bear.

She had her "attacks," she "felt badly" very often nowadays, poor dear; and how was a Patricia person to be expected to make allowances for the fact that at such times poor Agatha was unavoidably a little cross and pessimistic? V

" "Through the following winter, the want of necessaries for the support of the enfeebled and wretched soldier was most severely felt.

The floating grass panicles are scarcely felt in brushing through their midst, so flue are they, and none of the flowers have tall or rigid stalks.

But his practice from causes which I feel my own infirmity too sensibly that way to arraignor perhaps from that pure infelicity which accompanies some people in their walk through life, and which it is impossible to lay at the door of imprudencewas now reduced to nothing.

It takes so little to upset him, you see, for he feels so acutely what he calls the discords of life.

Few men could feel differently.

But just because she is so kind, you must feel the more bitterly for her.

" The loss of their right half-back was distinctly felt by the Birchites during the commencement of the second half, and Diggory was called upon three times in quick succession to save his charge.

Day by day within that church, as one grows to manhood and womanhood, one enters into race-experiences, and feels, however vaguely, that the Holy Spirit abides within them all.

Without a legitimate heir, the house of Pericles, one branch of the great Alcmaeonid gens by his mother's side, would be left deserted, and the continuity of the family sacred rites would be brokena misfortune painfully felt by every Athenian family, as calculated to wrong all the deceased members, and provoke their posthumous displeasure toward the city.

When such men have it in their hands, they feel dimly that they are laying tangible hold at last on some elusive vision of happiness that has hitherto escaped them.

Not one man in a thousand was capable of feeling so intensely and deeply as Aylmer felt, and never in his life before had he felt anything like it.

"If we have luck and find some bedding" She was already feeling her way cautiously between several chairs and tables, with the girls following close behind.

Personally, I feel under obligations to him for assistance in my campaigns which no other man could, or would, have rendered.

There was no other sound, no footstep on the deck; I merely felt the approach, realizing the increasing glare of those horrible eyes.

But I could feel its outline as plainly as ever under my coat, and decided, thankfully, that after all the alarm had had nothing to do with me.

In 1789 General Washington is said to have offered John Jay his choice of offices under the new government, and Jay chose the chief justiceship, because there he thought he could make his influence felt most widely.

Intuitively he felt that during his little visit his intense feeling had radiated, and not displeasedperhaps a little impressedher.

I felt dreadfully.

Thereforeand possibly, too, from a similar narrowness in his own characteran American seldom feels quite as if he were at home among the English people.

I don't think I had any feeling about this as I turned away from that common bustle of the railway which made my private preoccupations feel so strangely out of date.

All he felt vividly was a burning shame.

452 adverbs to describe how to  feels  - Adverbs for  feels