Example sentences of "feel [prep] the " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | The full force of the policy was felt during the 1890s under the dynamic organization of Count Witte , Minister of Finance from 1892 to 1903 . |
2 | Although the enormous difficulties of the German economy could be felt during the Düsseldorf and Hannover fairs , both proved to be more successful for the participating ceramic dealers than last year 's fairs ’ . |
3 | The characteristic attitude in large-scale economic management , both inside government and in the private sector , which has made itself increasingly felt during the post-war period , is the pursuit of intellectual coherence . |
4 | This created a few problems as intense rivalry was felt between the children from the two towns . |
5 | A full term pregnant female may be palpated while held as shown in Figure lb. the uterus is gently felt between the thumb and forefinger of the free hand . |
6 | The warmth of the sub-lava magna can still be felt through the feet . |
7 | Quick release crampons ( Grivel 2Fs ) worked well for glacier approaches , although the plastic heel lever was easily felt through the soft heel leather of the boot . |
8 | The courthouse windows were open but the radiators below them were hot ; it took several hours for any changes in setting to make themselves felt through the massive heating system , and it was impossible to keep up with the irrational temperament of the month . |
9 | When the fabric is up , these battens can be felt through the fabric , making it easy to fix nails and picture hooks to them . |
10 | But the weight of the clubhead can only be felt through the hands and fingers since this is the only part of the body in contact with the club . |
11 | Sadness far the way he had felt about the old man blended with a sense that his childhood was irrecoverably lost , and the knowledge that the very past when it was in flight Lived , like the present , in continual death . |
12 | Probably the classic statement of this approach is that used by the J. Walter Thompson ‘ T-Plan ’ , as described by Stephen King in Developing New Brands , where responses are divided into responses from the senses ( what is perceived about the brand ) , from the reason ( what is believed about the brand ) and from the emotions ( what is felt about the brand ) . |
13 | Guilt and exhaustion is what she had felt for the next year . |
14 | That evening , as her mother had stood at the kitchen door with the shadow of future old age lurking behind her , she had felt for the first time what it was to be a grown-up , what it was that she was missing in the never-never land of Fenna 's spell . |
15 | Any guilt she many have felt for the loss of her son did not affect her longevity . |
16 | I had felt for the first time a gnawing loneliness , finding echoes of familiar landscapes in the sweep of a glen , the gentle bend of a river . |
17 | The saga , which was illustrated with his own naïve pen-and-ink drawings , had its origins in the compassion he had felt for the sufferings of the animals in the past war ( ‘ If we made [ them ] take the same chances as we did ourselves , why did we not give them similar attention when wounded ? ’ ) and in the letters about an imaginary horse surgery that he had written home from the front to his two children , Elizabeth and Colin ( the latter of whom habitually called himself Dr Dolittle ) . |
18 | During it , the reader is put in a position with the boys — you want them to succeed , and no real sympathy is felt for the pigs . |
19 | The Literary Critic does n't understand English ; still less does it have any feel for the aesthetics of the language . |
20 | My son did n't live more than a few hours , but I can feel for the parents of that little girl . |
21 | One can only feel for the Jesuits : when their Order was dissolved in 1777 , they had only enjoyed the finished church for two years . |
22 | So I do feel for the chump who , late for a smart dinner party , dashes into the local off-licence and forks out £50 for a bottle of Mouton Rothschild 1988 . |
23 | Whatever sympathy one might feel for the restaurateur in the present case ( or for any other defendant who might suffer economic loss , social ostracism , shame or intimidation as a result of publication of details pending charges which may or may not result in his conviction ) nothing in the present case comes close to satisfying Lord Diplock 's test . |
24 | She can not feel for the child she hurts . |
25 | Twice before she 'd had proposals of marriage and had rejected them because she could n't feel for the men they came from . |
26 | He does feel for the young man . |
27 | Defendants are entitled to give evidence of their honest state of mind , and to explain why their dominant motive , irrespective of any dislike they may feel for the plaintiff , was to comment on a matter of public interest . |
28 | Michael , you have done a lot of work both with and for Equity , what do you feel about the present day students ' dilemma ? |
29 | ‘ How do you feel about the loss of Uridia 's main market for marioc ? ’ he shouted above the music . |
30 | ( Trevor Newsom is speaking to the President by satellite from Luctia , interposed Derek Carlisle. ) 'How do you feel about the collapse of interplanetary trade ? ’ asked Trevor . |