Example sentences of "[adv] feel [prep] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Some people love the excitement of the most innovative styles in furnishings ; others can only feel at home in settings with a warm traditional feeling or a breath of country air .
2 But Miss Dallam would not only feel at ease with it but would look well in it too .
3 However it is n't quite as bad as it looks because the amount that you will have paid in will only feel like £4,520 .
4 He found it and obviously felt at ease enough to go ahead with the appointment , ’ said Mr King .
5 Another was the comparative economic weakness of the Celtic nations , especially felt with passion in Scotland where a continuous nationalist upsurge from the mid-1960s threatened a major disruption of the United Kingdom .
6 It 's especially felt by Mary , who at 83 , is the oldest member .
7 I suddenly felt at ease and I 'm just hoping I can stay in the side alongside Alan . ’
8 A second , and more interesting , possibility is that subjects are actually recalling the situations in which they personally felt at risk irrespective of any other features of the junction .
9 Quite possibly because whatever she personally felt about Naylor Massingham , manners were still manners .
10 If your candidate is going to research the level of pollution in a local river , he does n't stand on the bridge and look ; he either wades in to feel for junk or he goes in with a professional diver to find it .
11 In addition , it considered some specifically Welsh issues , mainly the prevalence of two languages in school and community , but also the existence of large rural areas with sparse population , and the high respect widely felt for education and for teachers .
12 The Government President of Swabia formulated what was undoubtedly widely felt in September 1941 , when he wrote that ‘ from here , the proceedings in the homeland must appear ‘ Bolshevistic ’ , the blatant contradiction incomprehensible ; people can not believe that the Führer approves of this . ’
13 The effects of the general economic crisis were being acutely felt in Britain and Spain by the mid-1970s or earlier .
14 This unease is intensely felt on Sir Thomas 's return to Mansfield Park from the West Indies , a flaw in him which is finally accountable for Julia 's errors and for Maria 's exclusion from polite society .
15 McDiarmid considers Volpone ‘ our great classical comedy ’ but nonetheless the play can have its longueurs , which is why his first instinct seems absolutely right — to knock an hour off its length , thereby distilling a Jonsonian energy rarely felt on stage .
16 I thought of cold nights in Edinburgh and went everywhere with a relaxation I had rarely felt in Peru .
17 Situationist influence was more menacingly felt in France especially in the universities , although it has to be said that their influence upon the events of May 1968 has been exaggerated .
18 In spite of his expressed desire to soak up atmosphere , he did not feel at home there .
19 He said there are parts of Britain including Leicester , Bradford and East London where ‘ you can not feel at home ’ and warned of a ‘ tidal wave of North Africans poised to flood into the UK . ’
20 Psychiatrists do not feel at ease testifying in court today , according to one author of the report , Dr Loren Roth , who is director of the Law and Psychiatry Institute and Clinic at the University of Pittsburgh in Pennsylvania .
21 Those messages like ‘ Little boys do n't cry ’ , ‘ Keep a stiff upper lip ’ and ‘ Maintain a brave face ’ make it very difficult to describe experiences where we did not feel in control and did not appear invulnerable .
22 He lay back , resting his head on his hands that were clasped behind him , closing his eyes even though he did not feel like sleep .
23 But it did not feel like drugs .
24 She liked wearing the cap ; it made her feel different , as did the long grey coat that went down to the top of her boots , because then she did not feel like Millie Forester , whose mother and father were dead and had no-one belonging to her , except the fat woman and the man with short legs , but more like a princess who , every now and again , donned strange clothes and went out among the common people , and was kind to them , and yet always remained a princess under the disguise .
25 I found that I no longer felt for Jean-Claude but for myself .
26 These had been regular church-goers in the Caribbean but had not felt at home in the more restrained worship of the British churches , and some had felt cold-shouldered by the white members .
27 A sensation she had not felt for months — of muted excitement and expectation — went through her .
28 One of them was that he opened his morning newspaper with an enthusiasm he had not felt for years .
29 This proposal has become known as " Saint-Venant 's principle " , often interpreted as implying that local eccentricities of stress are not felt in distances greater than the largest linear dimension of the area over which the forces are distributed .
30 I just feel at home here . ’
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