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Example sentences for "feel about"

  • That's exactly the way I feel about life; it's worth going after if you only get the aroma.

  • Sometimes I wonder how I'm going to hold back, when I lay hands on him, from--killing.

  • Lilly had rebelled against its cart-wheel proportions, but in the end her mother's selection prevailed.

  • A porter shoved her bags into one of these, the driver leaning an ear down off his box.

  • If it was impossible before, think how I feel about it now I know that you love me.

  • I guess you know how I feel about Judith, Johnny," said Doug in a low voice.

  • That's just the way I feel about it too, Douglas.

  • Well," he said, surlily, "now you know how I feel about it!

  • But I wish I had words to make you realize how I feel about it!

  • I ought to know such things, I ought to feel about them!

  • Only because it is true, papa: and, if you will believe it now, perhaps you will get to feel about it as I do.

  • Oh, if you knew how it makes me feel about myself!

  • Yes, that's just how I feel about him," cried Mina eagerly.

  • What should you think Harry must feel about me?

  • I don't know how you'll feel about it, but we all think you ought to consider other things besides your personal preferences.

  • Yet the faculty of conception is but dim and feeble in the mind even of the peasant to-day; his function is to perceive the actual fact year by year, and to feel about it.

  • Moreover, and this is very important, we all feel about art a certain obligation, such as some of us feel about religion.

  • We feel about it, as noted before, a certain "ought" which always spells social obligation.

  • They're feeling about it now just as we feel about it.

  • That's exactly how I want you to feel about it.

  • I wonder if you know how I feel about it?

  • Yes, that is the way I feel about it," declared Lean Wolf.

  • I will tell you how I feel about it," said Sun Bird.

  • Yes, my brother, that is how I feel about it," said White Otter.

  • And that's the way I feel about it--I have given up all other duties in the world.

  • That is truly what I feel about you, and that is why I love you.

  • Somehow, I don't feel about dying as lot of folks do," she remarked to the singer lady, as she stood in front of the tall old chest of drawers in her own room a few minutes later.

  • I don't know how you are going to feel about it, but I bring the news of an honor which we are to share.

  • Well," she said with a long breath of contentment, "well, I do feel about ready to get ready to rest.

  • And just as I feel about you, I feel about everybody.

  • I'd feel about it just as you--" the words died on her lips, as she suddenly realized how their unconscious phrasing sounded.

  • You chaps know how I feel about it--I told you last night.

  • I feel about her as if she were a piece of live opal--the best bit that fool of a son of mine ever brought from the Ridge.

  • That is the way I feel about it all the time: just visiting.

  • I have been longing to talk to somebody; nobody seems to feel about it as I do.

  • Because that's the way I feel about mine.

  • No matter how we feel about it, the North and the South must live together, and it is not my nature to live in hate.

  • But, dear Captain Bodine, you don't know how deeply we feel about this.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "feel about" 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:
    assistant superintendent; borrow from; dear girl; distant relative; feel ashamed; feel convinced; feel good; feel inclined; feel like; feel more; feel obliged; feel quite; feel the; feel very; feeling like; feeling rather; feelings towards; feels himself; friend and; generally applied; mighty hard; miniature painter; other citizens; time limit; tourist industry; were the