When the person that we really love is dead the happiness of life ceases for us; emotionally our world becomes dark as the physical world becomes when the sun has set.
They are still emotionally attached to the older religious faith.
The hitherto mentally and emotionally normal trader, husband, and father was thus suddenly swept off his feet and carried irresistibly away on a mighty tide.
He was touched, deeply touched, by Slade's clumsy admiration, and he felt weak, emotionally exhausted after his little spree.
He was emotionally and physically tired, feeling that vague, melancholy happiness that comes after an intense but pleasant experience.
The more so as the necessary foreignness of the absolute is cancelled emotionally by its attribute of totality, which is universally considered to carry the further attribute of perfection in its train.
I wouldn't have becomeemotionally upset had I started in sequence.
Would you please consider I am very emotionally upset and tired, sir.
The chief trouble now becomes over-sentimentality, the tendency to develop emotionally at the expense of the mind.
I was very emotionally disturbed, and they thought that a change from Puerto Rico to Dallas where my sister was would improve me, which it did, of course.
This was and is the general conclusion I now have as to his general motivations, his overall motivations, insofar as he has tended to be emotionally unstable.
Whenever he seemed on the verge of discovering something or emotionally upset, it hit at him.
Even a metrical, emotional and beautiful utterance of a commonplace idea sometimes becomes poetry, but I cannot concede that the prose version of a great verse poem may not be poetry if still emotionally expressed.
An idea emotionallytreated becomes poetry whether in prose or verse, whether rhythmical or not.
All ideas are philosophic or scientific, and emotionally and beautifully expressed may become poetry or literature.
The moralist and aesthete joined forces in attacking Balzac and Stendhal when these novelists gave us unpopular ideas emotionally expressed.
Aristotle perceived that the spectator of tragedy was putting himself in the place of the characters, living their lives emotionally and sympathizing with them.
The facts, notions or ideas are notemotionally presented.
Any intellectual and even moral performance may be elevated into poetry, when emotionally and ecstatically presented.
We like to think of him as an Ishmaelite, as one who is against his age, since the majority is often incapable of welcoming a new and great idea even emotionally treated.
Poetry finds its best material in metaphysical and ethical truths emotionally presented.
It means feeling, intensely, physical sensations of which most people are unaware, or reacting emotionally to situations which call for no such response.
Though essentially adult and practical in all matters of business and daily life, Joanna was still emotionally adolescent, and her betrothed state satisfied her as it would never have done if her feelings had been as old as her years.
It may be that any farmer, but particularly the Chinese, is emotionally involved in his crop, in contrast to the industrial worker, who often is alienated from the product he makes.
He was anti-intellectual andemotionally attached to Buddhism; he opposed Confucianism for emotional reasons and believed that it could give him no serviceable officials of the sort he wanted.
A woman's feeling that she will be emotionally gratified by making a sacrifice does not prove that, aside from her momentary pleasure, there is any value in it.
There must be this welding of self with self if the emotionally awakened man or woman is to escape loneliness.
The complete realization of sex after marriage is never so fully accomplished, emotionally and lovingly, if the two have refused to wait.
I have spoken of how hopeless it is for an opera singer to try to work emotionally or purely on impulse; of how futile the merely temperamental artist becomes on the operatic stage.
Now everyone was triumphant and happy and emotionally exultant.
There is only a sensation of red, not a definite spot where red can be placed; and for the canvas to be truthful emotionally there must be only that sensation of red in the painted shadow.
For it is known that emotionally accentuated things are better retained in memory than indifferent things.
The signs thus far discussed are not found spread about in an arbitrary way through the whole experiment, but are seen in very definite places, namely, where the stimulus words strike against emotionally accentuated complexes.
Its essence is to exclude instantly whatever is opposed to its standpoint, whether it be intellectually logical or emotionally so.
This is quite true, but it does not hold for the linguistic expression of an emotionally accentuated content.
In many instances the memory fails, and as experience shows, these locations are stimulus words which touched an emotionally accentuated complex, or stimulus words immediately following such critical words.
They believed in it as something emotionally congenial to them, not, you may be sure, as a metaphysical truth discovered and confirmed by the intellect.
If the subject shows hesitation and embarrassment in responding to words referring to money, the indication is that he is emotionally disturbed over the state of his finances.
He is temperamentally and emotionally an Irishman, and intellectually and physically an American.
Were I obliged to characterize the fictional output of Italy during the past few years, I should say that it was imaginatively sterile and emotionally fecund.
He had an unhappy childhood, a perturbed adolescence, a lonely and isolated early manhood, an obsessed maturity, and an emotionally sterile old age.
Vainly offering his life for Italy, he is not somatically, mentally, or emotionally an Italian.
He had moved emotionally and not intellectually; he hadn't known, from hour to hour, in what direction he would proceed.
The prodigious women, often paler than the men, drinking with them, gabbled in a loud and corrupt Spanish and, without hats on their sere crinkled masses of hair, were unrestrained in displays of calculated or emotionally demented excitement.
With that precociously sophisticated instinct of hers she realised that the man had been emotionally stirred, and divined in her funny child's mind that it was her dancing which had so stirred him.
As she moved she bent upon the audience a preoccupied gaze, by which she seemed to observe numbers, chances, from a point remote and emotionally involved.
This means that when an emotionally exciting object stimulates the subject simultaneously with one not emotionally exciting, the latter may in time (or even after one joint stimulation) arouse the same emotional response as the former.
At times, we can become so immersed in our convictions that we cannot take criticism and respond emotionally to ideas or interpretations that do not coincide with logical thinking.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "emotionally" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.