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Page "W. P. Kinsella" ¶ 9
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get and feel
Honest I could feel the hair stand up on the back of my neck like a dog's that is going to get into a fight.
This gives you a better opportunity to get the feel of the climate conditions, the exposure to the sun and wind, the water interests, etcetera, which vary greatly with the seasons.
It is possible, of course, to work on extant or projected buildings where either architect or owner will explain their necessities so that the student may get `` the feel '' of real interior design demands.
By seeing such varied places, both interesting and beautiful, you will become aware of the many different civilizations Rome has lived through, and in particular, get a feel of Renaissance Rome.
How would you feel about it if I were to ask you for a date when I get through at Hanover ''??
He could feel himself falling in with it and being unable to get out.
`` Once you get the feel of it, there's not much to it.
I've tried to teach some of the other boys to kick and some of them can't seem to get the feel.
And you know you will always wonder all of your life whether it was because you wanted him so bad that you didn't get him, and you can feel nearly sorry enough to cry when you think of that other guy, the chump who begged you to marry him, the one with the plastered hair and the car he couldn't afford and the too-shiny shoes.
You feel an intense fear when you think of dying, or you may think of it more often than normal, or can ’ t get it out of your mind.
One should either feel a puff of air or see a flicker of the candle flame with pin that one does not get with bin.
( She was engaged to Mu Bai's brother, so they feel it would not be honorable to get married.
Other English copulas include to become, to get, to feel, and to seem.
" Another key component affecting a trial outcome is the jury selection, in which attorneys will attempt to include jurors from whom they feel they can get a favorable response or at the least unbiased fair decision.
Most crochet uses far less than 1 / 3 more yarn than knitting for comparable pieces, and a crocheter can get similar feel and drape to knitting by using a larger hook or thinner yarn.
Divers often feel, for example, that they do not get adequate support over issues like the provision of facilities.
He enjoys destroying things, mauling the mailman, tormenting Odie, kicking Odie off the table ; he also makes snide comments, usually about Jon's inability to get a date ( in one strip, when Jon bemoans the fact that no one will go out with him on New Year's, Garfield replies, " Don't feel bad Jon.
Although a lot of information-gathering is accomplished legally through competitive intelligence, at times corporations feel the best way to get information is to take it.
For once the Jews should get the feel of popular anger ...
This is normally only started after the patient has been free from illicit drugs for a considerable amount of time and feel able or willing to attempt to go the whole way and to get completely free of substance use.
" The idea is that, faced with an opportunity to steal a book because we can get away with it, moral obligation itself has no power to stop us unless we feel an obligation.
Josephson contends that some scientists feel uncomfortable about ideas such as telepathy and that their emotions sometimes get in the way when making evaluations.
Many Asians do not want to lose respect in society by admitting they are in pain and need help, believing the pain should be borne in silence, while other cultures ( e. g. Jewish ) feel they should report pain right away and get immediate relief.
However some players feel that they get better control using the ring finger.
# Biofeedback, Physical Therapy and Relaxation: Biofeedback, often done by physical therapists, involves inserting a vaginal sensor to get a sense of the strength of the muscles and help a patient get greater control of her muscles to feel the difference between contraction and relaxation.

get and for
There's bound to be someone on guard, but the hat might fool them long enough for me to get close ''.
Before we get through he'll have the Blackfeet hankerin' for our hair and our goods.
Well, the grass was there, though in some places the ground was too steep for a cow to get to it.
`` Don't get yourself killed for something that doesn't concern you ''.
Rod shifted his eager eyes from the milling group out in the circle long enough to reply, `` I ain't much of a hand for Dare-Base and Farmer-in-the-Dell, but I'd sure like to get in on the handhold and wrestles ''.
Besides, 'tain't no more'n right for me to follow with my black oxen, so's I can unhook and pull up fast if either of you get in a pinch ''.
There was, of course, no way for the other planes to get by them.
I showed her the shower and tub, and she said, smiling, `` If you really don't mind, I think I'll get clean in the shower, then soak for a few minutes in your tub.
I dismissed these feelings as wishful thinking but I could not get it out of my head that we had a strong physical attraction for one another and we both feared to dwell on it because of our relationship.
A card to Walter would get him an introduction to this Meredith, and that might be good for something.
Packing a small suitcase, informing her husband whom she found in Harry's Bar that she was taking a train to Germany to get away for a while, patting his arm, refusing a drink, getting on the train -- all this had only taken her two hours.
Most of the time I get what I ask for ''.
School began in August, the hottest part of the year, and for the first few days Miss Langford was very lenient with the children, letting them play a lot and the new ones sort of get acquainted with one another.
This almost trivial example is nevertheless suggestive, for there are some elements in common between the antique fear that the days would get shorter and shorter and our present fear of war.
Presumably a cocktail party is expected to fulfill the host's desire to get together a number of people who are inadequately acquainted and thereby arrange for bringing the level of acquaintance up to adequacy for future cooperative endeavors.
Proprietorships should get the tax advantages now accruing to corporations, e.g. the chance to accumulate capital so vital for growth.
After we got a script and the spots for the songs were blocked out, we'd get together for an hour or so every day.
That unused room was large enough for -- well, say an elephant could get into it and, as a matter of fact, an elephant did.
There's a man who never goes by the ordinary road but still arrives at his goal, who gratuitously gets himself into difficulty in order to get out of it with eclat, in a word a man who creates monsters for himself in order to appear a Hercules in destroying them ''.
Up to now, Gorton had been looking for trouble, and now that he was trying to get away from it, trouble started looking for him.
As it was the custom of that alert colony to take over the property of persons asking for protection, this was an act roughly equivalent to throwing open the door to a pack of wolves and saying `` Come and get it ''.
`` It was mighty good for the old man to get out again ''.

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