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Example sentences for "feel better"

  • You'll feel better about it when somebody comes to take you away.

  • Go and eat your dinner, you'll feel better after it.

  • And if you don't feel better to-morrow I'll lose my guess.

  • I hope you'll give me something to make me feel better," he wailed.

  • And he had begun, at last to feel better, when--biff!

  • You're a bit shaken up, but you'll feel better by and by.

  • We'll feel better about it then, eh, fellows?

  • He didn't feel better till he'd got right to the other end of the passage!

  • Somehow she was beginning to feel better.

  • She strove to go on cheerfully, "Now I've said it, I feel better, I promise not to mention it again.

  • I had not used their remedies a week before I began to feel better, and as I continued the treatment my health gradually improved.

  • After taking it for three months I began to feel better, especially the gas and sour rising off my stomach at night.

  • After using the special medicines which he prepared for me for a few days I commenced to feel better, the shortness of breath gradually disappearing; the paroxysms of asthma were less frequent and not so severe.

  • But it made me feel better for a while to think that I'd thought it and hadn't said it.

  • I guess there wasn't anything could make us feel better.

  • That made me feel better and I kind of raised up on my hands and stopped crying, but when I looked I was scared worse than ever.

  • Just wrap yourself in this blanket and drink this down, and you'll feel better.

  • Never mind," the Toyman was saying, "It'll feel better soon.

  • Ye'll get a mite o' sleep an' feel better.

  • Then came that little smile of his, very kindly, which made me feel better.

  • I am sure he understood that I was just forcing myself to talk, and that he could say nothing that would make me feel better.

  • I must say that I was pleased with this expert appreciation, and began to feel better.

  • You'll feel better by yourself for a minute.

  • I feel better now I've been in the water.

  • Sitting on the arm of the sofa and caressing her] Feel better, dear?

  • But it's out now, and I--I feel better, perhaps.

  • Eve shall tell you I'm a reformed man, and you'll feel better.

  • The sensible and cheerful talk of the young man did me good, and I began to feel better, when the two young wantons, one of whom was a Frenchwoman, arrived in high spirits.

  • I told him I had to leave her on account of a sudden dizziness, but that I began to feel better.

  • I feel better already, and I shall be able to wait on you to-morrow.

  • Let's go to sleep, and maybe we'll feel better when we wake up.

  • Why, I feel better already," asserted Jack, as he munched some sandwiches which Washington White had made.

  • We feel better now, and maybe we'll have better luck.

  • Yes; and it makes me feel better satisfied, for the mutineers are such brutes--such savage brutes.

  • Yes," he said with a sigh, "I feel better.

  • The Doctor’s voice had such a ring of approval in it that Pam began at once to feel better.

  • I feel better than I have done since Sam was taken.

  • Sometimes she smiled appropriately, and repeatedly, when asked how she felt, said, “I feel better.

  • She now even dressed herself, answered slowly though not consistently, but she again denied feeling troubled or sad, “I feel better.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "feel better" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    cannot make; dark background; either from; feel about; feel better; feel certain; feel convinced; feel good; feel himself; feel inclined; feel just; feel myself; feel pain; feel quite; feel that; feeling quite; feeling sure; feelings were; feels himself; feels like; fill them; high crimes and misdemeanors; leave the; line stanzas; said steadily; that line