Dear, dear, it makes me feel quite old to look at you, when I call to mind the little boy whom I had charge of in the cockpit.
The surgeon was waiting for me; he bandaged me, and applied some cooling lotion to my side, which made me feel quite comfortable.
Then the whole day long the report of the rifles was heard and made me feel quite nervous, and later the shouts and jodles of the peasants who arrived rather the worse for wine.
I feel quite unhappy, and bewildered when I think of the past.
Disguising Age} It makes me feel quite old, when I think of her and Mrs. Palsgrave, and see all the changes of the last eighteen years.
Mine have been troubling me so much lately that I feel quite martyrised.
I feel quite drawn to her, and shall try to know her better.
She was reflecting upon the change as she sat at her solitary dinner that evening, and she concluded by cheerfully assuring herself that she really was beginning to feel quite as if she were married.
When I am answering invitations or doing the theatres I feel quite as if I expected you.
I know," was my reply; "but I feel quitesure of this lady's word.
I feel quite uneasy, I assure you; and if it were not that we have killed all these creatures in the cause of science, I should be perfectly miserable.
I now began to feel quite interested in my responsible position as guardian of the camp.
You put things in such a fearfully dark and murderous light that I feel quite as if I were a murderer.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "feel quite" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.