2532 collocations for feel

I feel little interest.

Still human ingenuity felt its way carefully onward, until the great fact was developed, that steam was in truth capable of moving machinery, was endowed almost with vitality, and could be made to throw the shuttle and spin.

"Shall I do it?" asked Violet, feeling an almost irresistible desire to push Billie away and fling back the lid.

"I don't have much of a brave heart, but I often feel the need of it when I am sick and lonely.

He asked him if he felt any pain in his side?

Arriving opposite it, we walked out on to the projecting arm of rock, and I must confess to having felt an intolerable sense of terror as I looked down from that dizzy perch into the unknown depths below usinto the deeps from which there rose ever the thunder of the falling water and the shroud of rising spray.

He feels himself a self-directing power, and at times asserts this power against the will of those who would make him do what he does not want to do.

To feel my hand in another man's hand was much, but to be led into that awful presence, by awful ways, which none knewhow could I bear it?

He felt the influence himself, although he staid there only a few days.

I have been anxious for some time to broach the subject, but I saw that our going would be a trouble to you; now, since fortune offers this chance, we must seize itthat is, those of us who feel it a duty to go"; and she looked meaningly at Merry and her daughter.

As children get older, and have the power to look back, they will feel the necessity of keeping records; and thus the Nature Calendar, forerunner of geography, will be adopted naturally.

They reached the plank, got a rope round the foreman's body, when they too began to feel the effects of the gas, and ascended the ladder, whilst the foreman was being hoisted up by means of the rope.

To read the lives of Wesley, Whitefield, Finney, Moody, is to feel a strange, deep thrill.

The physician, after feeling his pulse, (which, as every country has its peculiar customs, is done here about the temples and neck, instead of the wrist)after examining his tongue, his teeth, his water, and feces, proposed bleeding.

His arms never felt the weight.

Why, then, should I, who have made you my exemplar, feel a pang at parting with a sceptre which for years has only tired my hand?

He felt my touch and sprang to his feet, clutching me by the shoulder as a man clutching rescue.

As I have said, before, I felt some fear; though almost of an impersonal kind.

" "Some of your friendsI won't name theminsisted, or at least let me feel the force of their suspicions.

But if the white men after this passage did not feel an absolute confidence in Nicholas's fairness of mind, no such unworthy suspicion of them found lodgment in the bosom of the Prince.

I know the sick and impotent hatred of me that is seething in your heart; and I feel for you the pity you pretend to entertain toward me.

You can do what you like" He stopped for a few moments and Lister began to feel some sympathy.

The very rocks and glaciers seem to feel her presence, and become imbued with her own fountain sweetness.

Even we, who were but temporary tenants, felt a vague pride in them, as if they somehow reflected a certain consequence upon ourselves.

She was looking wistfully on a bunch of flowers in her hand, which I felt pleasure in recognising to be the same I had seen on the piece of embroidery.

2532 collocations for  feel