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Example sentences for "feel very"

  • The regularity with which visit succeeded visit to the old man's house thereafter made me feel very grateful to Mademoiselle Prefere, who succeeded at last in winning her right to occupy a special corner in the City of Books.

  • Secretly, however, I was beginning to feel very uneasy.

  • Thereupon I began to feel very despondent, and to utter divers lamentations.

  • I am too old now to feel very deeply; but how strangely painful a mystery is the death of a child!

  • Dear uncle, it makes me feel very happy to hear you say you love Ethel and me.

  • You have made me happy, and I feel very grateful to you, and I feel glad and certain of conquering when I reflect that your situation is different to mine.

  • I feel very weak; for the last three days I have only taken a little broth and chocolate.

  • As I owed her a compliment, I could think of nothing better than to tell her that though she had not offended me she had made me feel very uncomfortable.

  • It seems to me," I answered, "that you don't feel very anxious to hear my reply.

  • She began to feel very tired, and suddenly, whilst answering one of his searching, gentle questions, her voice broke, and she burst into tears.

  • It was rather cold on the downs, but I feel very much as usual, thank you, mother.

  • In spite of Smart's promises, Jack began to feel very weary of confinement in the precincts of the inn, and determine on insisting that Long Sam should take his place.

  • Change of place and occupation will make you feel very differently.

  • Yes, John, I do not doubt you in anything you say, and I feel very grateful to you for your kindness; but I cannot return your love.

  • I certainly do, even now, feel very different to what I did when I wrote to you last, dear lady, from Bury.

  • The king ate the whole dish, and immediately began to feel very sleepy, as the medicine was strong and took effect quickly.

  • When they had all gone, after a time Agbor began to feel very lonely, so he left the site of his old town and also went to the Cross River to live, so that he could see his friends.

  • In a week's time he began to feel very ill, and as the days passed he became worse, so he sent for his Ju Ju man.

  • Illustration: "I feel very grateful to you.

  • Well, I hardly know how to put it; but, whether you are successful or not, I feel very grateful to you, and I hope you will not be offended at what I am going to say.

  • Your obliging favors of various dates came safe to hand last week, and contain a fine parcel of agreeable intelligence, for which I am much obliged, and I feel very important to have such a budget to communicate.

  • I sit down to write, though I feel very languid.

  • I feel very differently at the approach of spring from what I did a month ago.

  • I feel very grateful to you for the kindness with which you express yourself.

  • If you bring the "Conscious Machine Controversy," I may read it, although I feel very uncharitable to the hard, presumptuous unwisdom of some modern metaphysics.

  • This last suggestion of Harry made me feel very anxious, as I had often heard of the atrocities of which bushrangers had been guilty.

  • Beginning to feel very hungry, I made signs to our captors that I should like to have some food; and I also pointed to Dick, wishing to make them understand that he too required nourishment.

  • I began to feel very much as a person does in a dream, when he cannot get away from monsters in chase of him.

  • I was lightly clad, and the night damp had made me feel very chilly.

  • And--one should know the truth about his conduct beforehand, to feel very confident of a good result.

  • I am so glad that I do know just a little before, though it did make me feel very sad at first.

  • She felt sure that she would see her bonnie wee leddy emerge from some of those vistas of brightness; but when she did not come, the little girl began to feel very forlorn as she stood there in the hall.

  • I feel very painfully, too, for the part I should have left to such of my friends here as would defend me, and yet have not a fragment to guide their defence.

  • A man gets to feel very like a 'flunkey,' coming up in this fashion each morning 'for orders.

  • I don't feel very comfortable on my knees, it is true, but it is all my own fault if I am there.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "feel very" 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:
    feel assured; feel good; feel inclined; feel more; feel obliged; feel quite; feel that; feel the; feel very; feeling quite; feeling rather; feeling sure; feeling that; feeling very; feelings were; feels like; igneous origin; mere handful; minute particles; mon vieux; que vous; small pinch; suddenly came; synchronous motor; when viewed; young gentleman