We found 25 examples of how to use feel for in an English sentence.
Sentences 1 to 25 of 25.
# | Sentence | |
---|---|---|
1. | I feel for you. | |
2. | I really feel for you. | |
3. | I feel for you deeply. | |
4. | Feel for the pockets of your raincoat. | |
5. | We should feel for the pains of others. | |
6. | She has a feel for beauty. | |
7. | I feel for my father, who has to work on Sundays. | |
8. | First, in order to get a feel for your favourite author's work, transcribe and copy in full. | |
9. | I feel for what you're going through. | |
10. | We can come to look upon the deaths of our enemies with as much regret as we feel for those of our friends, namely, when we miss their existence as witnesses to our success. | |
11. | I know you love me, but all I feel for you is just affection. | |
12. | The doctor will examine the pelvis and rectum to feel for any blockages. | |
13. | She has a feel for music. | |
14. | We feel for your loss. | |
15. | The love I feel for him has already grown cold. | |
16. | He has absolutely no feel for it. | |
17. | It comes from within the love that I feel for you. | |
18. | I would like to get a feel for your rapport with the customer. | |
19. | "See our Priam! Even here / worth wins her due, and there are tears to flow, / and human hearts to feel for human woe." | |
20. | What do you feel for me? | |
21. | I know that you love me, but all I feel for you is just affection. | |
22. | Tom and Mary didn't have a feel for the foreign currency, so they counted the cost of things in bars of chocolate: for example, using this conversion, a bus journey cost about two-and-a-third bars of chocolate, which Tom found rather expensive. | |
23. | Tom and Mary didn't have a feel for the foreign currency, so they counted the cost of things in bars of chocolate: for example, the cost of a bus journey translated to about two-and-a-third bars of chocolate, which was rather expensive, Tom thought. | |
24. | I can't control the lust I feel for him. | |
25. | You can't imagine what I feel for you. |