She tried to speak, but no words would come; he could feel, though, that she was trembling violently, and Edie pressed to her side.
He looked like silver, but I could feel that he was only electro-plate.
It was a marvel to Stratton as he recalled the past, and, as he sat gazing from the open window or strolled out upon the dusky sands, he wondered that he could feel so well.
Mastering myself, though, at last, I thrust my hand into his breast; but I could feel nothing.
Early every morning I went to mass, but the sense I used to have of returning from the divine sacrifice to the ordinary occupations of life with a new spirit and a clean heart I could feel no longer.
Something in his voice rather than in his question made my heart beat, and I could feel my face growing hot.
I clutched the edge of the desk and steadied myself and forced down the panic I could feel rising.
I bent my head and choked back the sobs I could feel rising in my throat.
My hands were sweating, and I could feel my heart pounding too fast against my ribs.
I could feel no holding of the breath; no stifling or sleepy sensation; nothing but horrible fear; as I hastily slipped the rope over my head and secured it with a noose round the poor fellow, whose arm I grasped.
He was muttering and talking the whole time, and every moment as I grew weaker, I could feel that I was being forced over the parapet.
Good night," I said, longing to be alone in my room where I could feel of a certainty that the few words spoken that night had anchored me for life.
My cheek was wet with tears, but hers was red as it touched mine, and I could feel that it was burning.
His voice shook with apprehension; I could feel that he trembled.
But Cornelius had a faculty granted to few: he could feel deeply, ardently, without sentimental exaggeration.
I mistook my own heart, and thought I could feel again as I once had felt.
He held out his arm till she could feel it in the dark, and she took it.
She had words ready for him, and she turned and fitted them in her heart that they might cut him and stab him as long as he could feel.
Fate had him now, and would not let him go while he could feel.
I could feel Tom's grasp at my elbow, but I could neither echo the applause nor answer him.
They did not hiss, but neither did they applaud; and I could feel, without being able to give any definite reason for the impression, that so far the play had failed.
I could feel my own pulse beating all the while with steady and regular stroke.
By pressing the knife forcibly, however, I could feel that it was not stone, but wood, some kind that was very hard, and that appeared to be polished finely on the surface.
I could feelin him how he already, from my at first finding nothing to reply, perceived the advantage he had gained.
He could feel, too, that the Marquis was shuddering beside him.
The note was there; he could feel it; and if he had desired to accompany Pierre, it was in order that he might drop it into the letter-box at the Palazzo Boccanera.
It seemed to him as if he were descending into a cellar, in deep obscurity, and he could feel a slippery soil impregnated with water beneath his feet.
He could feel it in his back, and it helped his conviction of virtue.
As he went from the room he could feel Ingpen's glance following him.
He could feel her in the house, ordering it, softening it, civilising it.
I could feel my hair and eyebrows scorch and burn; then in a moment everything would change.
I could feel my brain bursting out of my head, as that boiling liquor scalded and burned my tongue out of my mouth, and that tongue turned to a snake, and with forked tongue hissed at me.
I could feel my heart throb and beat as though it would burst out of my body.
He was calm and cool enough now, as I could feel as well as hear, for my hand was buried in his, while he pushed his way stolidly through the little crowd.
And with it, and through it all, I could feel that I was the cause.
I fancied, though I was not sure, that I could feel a tremble from his shoulders; but he was silent still.
He could feel it--the urge to fulfill his destiny--feel it within him, and no one else knew it was there.
But I could feel it pulling; and soon, in spite of myself, I was fairly close above it.
It beat him up again and again; he would sink back exhausted, thinking that he could feel no more; but it dragged him up once more--to agony without respite!
Of course, he could never actually be satisfied with what he did; but at least he could feel that it was the best he was equal to--he could get a real and honest sense of exhaustion for himself.
She caught hold of him and clung to him; he could feel, like an electric shock, the thrill of her excitement.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "could feel" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.