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Example sentences for "you feel"

  • And if you feel able to ride so far, Dora," continued he, "perhaps you will show me the way to the curious mounds we heard of from Dr.

  • Now, little girl, you feel better, don't you?

  • You feel," said Jimmy--he was sitting in one of his worst attitudes, with his legs stretched straight out before him and his feet tilted toes upwards.

  • You feel as if you were driven here for a refuge, and that is true.

  • And do you feel about me just as you do him?

  • You could make a chair or a table, and so you feel free to destroy them; but it takes ages and Almighty wisdom to evolve a creature like this, so you don't dare.

  • Don't you feel that my plan is a good one?

  • You feel, then, that it will decidedly be wise not to marry whilst we are still so poor?

  • Do you feel that, if we agreed to part, your love would be at once a thing of the past?

  • But don't you feel it's rather unmanly, this state of things?

  • I think you might, for a few weeks--if you feel it necessary.

  • You feel it will be difficult to resume your friendships afterwards.

  • Do you feel bound by this promise, my dear?

  • Don't fear that I shall say anything unkind; but if you feel equal to a woman's responsibilities, you must surely exercise a woman's good sense.

  • Do you feel as sure of his opinion as of Edward's?

  • Don't you feel ever so little regret that your severe logic prevailed?

  • Help her, by all means, if you feel compelled to.

  • I shall be glad to hear--if you feel at liberty to tell me.

  • You feel, I suppose, that in losing Isabella, you lose half yourself: you feel a void in your heart which nothing else can occupy.

  • You feel, as you always do, what is most to the credit of human nature.

  • Wouldn't you feel better if you told me, dear aunt Lucy?

  • I feel as if you had been long away, my dear child — don't you feel so too?

  • If you feel that as strongly as I do, Elfie, it will act as a strong corrective to the danger of false estimates.

  • In spite of my good will, you feel that I cannot divine, all at once, what it is that is required.

  • But why do you feel so interested in an unknown person?

  • You know, you feel, that I speak the truth," cried the latter, extending his arm towards the young Indian.

  • Do you feel a spasmodic fluttering in the concertina?

  • When you lie on your right side do you have an impulse to turn over on your left side, and when you turn over on your left side do you feel an impulse to jump out of bed and throw stones at a policeman?

  • Do you feel a roaring in the cornucopia with a tickling sensation in the diaphragm?

  • Do you feel a slight palpitation of the membrane of the Colorado madura and is there a confused murmur in your brain like the sound of a hard working gas meter?

  • As you feel toward my husband, it will probably not be pleasant for you to come to our pew" she had said; "but I hope the time will come when bygones will be bygones.

  • I tell you I can't feel as you feel, any more than you can squeeze water out of them old andirons.

  • If you are to succeed in your endeavor you are not to act as you feel.

  • If, then, you feel so much for me, do oblige me by persuading your father to leave this lonely house this day, and take up his abode in mine.

  • You speak boldly; but you speak as you feel, my child," replied Father Mathias after a pause.

  • You feel safe in her strength; and yet--yet there is a brooding terror, that rises out of your knowledge of Dalton's character.

  • You feel an access of goodness growing out of your boyish grief; you feel right-minded; it seems as if your little brother in going to Heaven had opened a path-way thither, down which goodness comes streaming over your soul.

  • Bidlow's school, you feel sure, would balk at a dozen problems you could give him.

  • You feel in a desert, where you once felt at home,--in a bounded landscape, that was once the world!

  • I do know you care; don't you feel so bad because I said that.

  • Do you feel better'n you did this morning?

  • Don't you feel bad; nobody is going to think any less of you.

  • Oh, very well--if you feel as romantic as that.

  • But I won't if you feel that I'm deserting you.

  • Do you feel able to play so soon in a real theatre, before so many people?

  • We will leave you so that you can dress, and then if you feel like it we will take you for a drive.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "you feel" 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:
    along with; many farmers; section twenty; you choose; you knew; you let; you say; you the; you try; young fella; young fellow; young fellows; young friend; young prince; young soldier; young woman; younger brother; youngest brother; your business; your house; your last; your people; your pocket; your room; your way; your wife