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.
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.
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.