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94 Sentences With "has the feeling"

How to use has the feeling in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "has the feeling" and check conjugation/comparative form for "has the feeling". Mastering all the usages of "has the feeling" from sentence examples published by news publications.

All of this has the feeling of a tipping point.
As a result, it has the feeling of a midcentury suburb.
It has the feeling of childbirth, messy and noisy and urgent.
As it stands, it still has the feeling of an awards juggernaut.
Ravenfield has the feeling of those early days of Minecraft about it.
Jeff VanderMeer's new novel, Dead Astronauts, has the feeling of a mosaic.
Nancy Reagan's death at 94 has the feeling both of tragedy and of metaphor.
He has the feeling that he has walked in on something sordid or abnormal.
But Handmaid's has the feeling of something "important," particularly at this moment in history.
It all has the feeling of an impressive men's wear store opening in 2009.
Despite the makeshift premises, this has the feeling of a well-organised and confident community.
"Tonight has the feeling of becoming a night of uprising," Akbari tweeted on January 7.
At the Seafarer's Preschool, the effort sometimes has the feeling of a venture into uncharted territory.
The serene rusticity of the valley has the feeling of a place rather than a playground.
One has the feeling that Bowden wanted to cram every bit of research into his book.
For anyone genuinely worried about these technologies, it has the feeling of a hammer waiting to fall.
It has the feeling of a space colony, maybe because of its cleanliness and the unforgiving terrain.
When the markets take a turn for the worse, everybody has the feeling that was a bad idea.
It has the feeling of a primitive ritual, or a "very long séance," as Mr. Balter put it.
It is surrounded by large citrus and olive ranches, and has the feeling of Tuscany, with bigger mountains.
Everything that has happened with Kavanaugh's confirmation since Ford came forward has the feeling of history repeating itself.
One has the feeling, though, that future generations will potentially look back and see a president as influential as Reagan.
They're defending fiercely, but it still has the feeling of someone bailing out a boat with a hole in it.
With floor-to-ceiling windows looking out over a steep lot, the airy home has the feeling of a treehouse.
The program began with Louise Talma's Violin Sonata (1962), a 15-minute piece that has the feeling of an episodic suite.
"To get effective results on rational points, it definitely has the feeling that there'd have to be a new idea," said Ellenberg.
And just like Dickie Bennett, Baldur has the feeling of a symptom, a herald for other beings more powerful than he is.
This blogger still has the feeling that politics may intervene, perhaps over North Korea, where some have been calling for a "limited strike".
Yet she's messing with them so vigorously that "Weeds," her fifth solo gallery show in New York, has the feeling of a breakthrough.
Much like Journey, playing through Abzû has the feeling of an album coming to life before your eyes, the visuals and sounds perfectly symbiotic.
Every show at the festival, where audience members are invited to picnic on the lawn beforehand, has the feeling of a celebratory summer feast.
What remains in Fear has the feeling of album filler from a band that knows you're just buying their latest record for the hit singles.
Thus, "Where Am I Going?" has the feeling of spending time with very smart people who both enjoy and detest each other all at once.
"Every woman has the feeling of opening up her closet and seeing the dozens of dead dresses that she's worn only once," she told me recently.
Normal People has the feeling of having been either rushed into publication following the success of Conversations With Friends or a draft for Conversations With Friends.
Although "Ornations" is meticulously notated, it often has the feeling of an unhinged improvisation, with instrumental sounds augmented by vocalizations, including a few screams and growls.
But while this game has the feeling of a Super Bowl preview, the relative strengths of these teams seem to heavily favor the Ravens at home.
The poem has the feeling of genuine, uneasy discovery, as if only through writing could he come to know who he is and what he feels.
Its design has the feeling of a European cafe dropped into the middle of the tropics: lace curtains, burnished walls, copper bar, fans rotating warm ocean air.
Each story has the feeling of a yarn that was based in some reality but has grown and shifted and become more acutely caricatured as people retold it.
Act II has the feeling of a magnifying glass being held up to the continuing, wide-ranging dialogues she seeks out with curators, artists, performers, writers, and researchers.
I think this is why The Hottest August has the feeling of science fiction, in a way, even though it doesn't present itself as a science fiction film.
It has been an exceptionally slow year for the IPO market, but New York Stock Exchange President Tom Farley has the feeling things will be heating up from here.
Far be it for an audience to tell its creators to be less creative, but one has the feeling Maroon 5 could stand to be a little more choosey.
Ms. Landon, 33, who has attended performances at the Joyce since she was a child, said that, to her, the Joyce has the feeling of a retro '70s theater.
And "The Image Book," for all its historical sweep and erudition, has the feeling of a personal testament — elusive, almost hermetic, but still motivated by an urge to communicate.
The first act is laden with inert monologues, but the second has the feeling of a pageant: present-day actors recounting California history, sometimes as a show within a show.
"Postpartum" has the feeling, just a bit, of a show spinning its wheels, postponing its next chapter because it's hoping to play out the string of a season just about done.
As he tells it, his story is anchored by the women with whom he falls in and out of love, and the book has the feeling of a thinly veiled memoir.
Until sex workers are offered protection granted to other people in high-risk jobs, Oyku also has the feeling that life won't get safer for trans women in Turkey any time soon.
" Another memo released Friday reports that then-Assistant Secretary for Inter-American affairs Thomas Mann "still has the 'feeling in his guts' that (Cuban leader Fidel) Castro hired Oswald to kill Kennedy.
Although it's a finished painting, the work has the feeling of a sketch — a way to capture the hastiness with which the killing was being done, as well as Spero's own anguished reaction.
It has the feeling of someone's front room: Everyone sits at the bar, and nobody sits at the tables—but there's no more room at the bar, so we sit at the tables.
"Cfern" in particular has the feeling of multiple songs, in different keys and rhythms, playing in browser tabs you can't find—with new ones popping up as you whack-a-mole the exit buttons.
Arriving on the Côte des Basques, one has the feeling of scaling a castle wall, burrowing through a secret garden and stumbling upon a colony of handsome seal men engaged in ritual aquatic worship.
The reason that this one — like Netflix's poaching of Shonda Rhimes from ABC last year — has the feeling of a turning point is that, as with all things Netflix, there is a definitional question involved.
And lastly, as far as Zhong and Ou are concerned, one has the feeling that when this is all over, neither will be particularly eager to pick up the check should they ever dine together again.
Smaller and more slight than the famously leggy Ms. Turner, Ms. Warren seems to grow in size and stature as she moves toward a fireworks-laden final concert in Brazil that has the feeling of a victory parade.
Act II the final component of the Sharjah Biennial Tamawuj has the feeling of a magnifying glass being held up to the wide-ranging dialogues chief curator Christine Tohmé seeks out with curators, artists, performers, writers, and researchers.
Before the end, the song has the feeling of falling into a trance — but that whispered line makes obvious just how laden with emotion "Female Vampire" is, its thumping beats less a disguise than a plea for help.
And while these causes are to be taken seriously, this tidy, hopeful summing up has the feeling of a shoehorned resolution to a soap opera cliffhanger, à la the notorious "Bobby's dream" episode of the original "Dallas" series.
" She calls this "a word that stops itself," and writes: "in the presence of a word that stops itself, in that silence, one has the feeling that something has passed us and kept going, that some possibility has got free.
Yes, truTV's I'm Sorry definitely has the feeling of having been there and done that, going back 17 years (roughly to when Curb Your Enthusiasm kicked off the "comedians living in Los Angeles and saying funny things about it" boom).
"It has the feeling of one of those civil wars in the Middle Ages, where the king is fighting against barons and there's multiple alliances that form and collapse," says Eric McGhee, a research fellow at the Public Policy Institute of California.
Facebook plans to foot the bill for the judges, but there is no way of getting around the fact that the project has the feeling of a payoff: Can judges who are paid, even indirectly, by Facebook be neutral arbiters of company policy?
But this weekend's four-game Yankees series has the feeling of desperation in New England, where autumn is in the air, football is on the mind and the bullpen is as crowded as the South Station T stop on a Monday morning.
The to-and-froing leaves him so spent that he's already nodding off in the middle of dinner, and if the whole sequence has the feeling of an "I Love Lucy" rerun, maybe it will prompt Carson to 'splain why he's been such a putz.
"While we can't really predict what form the standard of this instrument will take in the future, I'm not the only one who has the feeling that this bar type will endure as one of those standards," Fukasawa said of the original Infobar in the Phaidon monograph.
Mr. Fellowes emphasizes Trollope's humor without shortchanging the melodrama, and the production has the feeling of a high-def tribute to an earlier era of British film and television (emphasized by the use of old-fashioned fonts for the credits) — it achieves a kind of rollicking serenity.
On a regular business day, Bottura and his Tasmanian Devil energy cloud are mostly confined to Via delle Rose, a passageway alongside the restaurant that has the feeling of an alley where dusty postwar kids would've lobbed a soccer ball around, which is what the cooks do when a shift ends.
With an all-star cast — including Ed Harris, Scott Glenn, Sam Shepard, Fred Ward, Dennis Quaid and Barbara Hershey — it has the feeling of a sweeping epic, one that captures (albeit in a somewhat fictionalized form) the feeling of the early years of the space race and the American drive to prevail.
Coupled with an animation style that couldn't be more different from the bouncy, eye-popping CGI we're used to seeing in most big-screen fare, Early Man has the feeling of being handmade — linked less tightly to flashy cartoons and more to the stories we told when we were kids, acted out with Play-Doh.
Amenities will include a roof terrace, a fitness center, a children's playroom and a 24-hour concierge, said Mr. Lansill, who expects interest from townhouse owners in the area looking to downsize, as well as Manhattan residents who want a neighborhood that has the feeling of the West Village or TriBeCa and also the spectacular views many of the units will offer.
They pull up at a picnic spot (we can imagine that in the distance there are mountains, I see them as being snow-capped, for some reason) and in front of them there's a crystal-clear sea that could even be a lake, a body of water that somehow has the feeling of revelation, of clarity (which may or may not be the same thing), and dark sand, black sand (if you can imagine such a thing).
The song has an unusual form: the 32-bar chorus, rather than being preceded by a verse and containing an internal bridge as was becoming standard at the time, opens the song and then is followed by a 24-bar verse that has the feeling of a bridge before the chorus repeats.
Wandering around in the darkness, an amnesiac (Walter Abel) has the feeling that he's murdered someone. He reads that a theatrical producer has been killed and he thinks that he's guilty. However, unemployed actress Marie Smith (Margot Grahame), whom he meets while wandering around the park, isn't convinced, so she helps him reconstruct the clues and find the killer.
So far this location is unknown to those outside of his family having previously advertised a previous retreat which was then subsequently haunted and no longer suitable as a venue. Crabs - doesn't like them never has. The feeling is mutual. Bigfoot - although closely related to the beast of myth its humanoid appearance and complete coverage of hair unnerves him.
In the midst of the First World War, Elinor has returned to the family home. She has the feeling that Toby, a medical officer at the front in France, will not return home. Several weeks later they find out he is "Missing, believed killed." In denial about the War itself, and without a body located, Elinor cannot believe that the story she has been told is what actually happened.
Paul isn't always excited about that, because he has the feeling he needs to share his friend. The same feeling has Lisa, but Constantin manages it to have time for both and the three of them become a very strong unit. Constantin and Lisa face up and downs in their relationship. When Johannes is up against Constantin's brother Ansgar, he wants to make sure, that Constantin doesn't get involve and sends him off to Boston.
Woody didn't like this and goes away in his car. He then tells the audience that he has the feeling of being followed. Just then, Buzz pops out from the car's back and threatens to shoot Woody if he doesn't hand over the money. As Buzz Buzzard counts – one, two three, the woodpecker then sees that his car has a Seat Ejector and activates it, sending Buzz into the sky in the last minute.
Jay also has the feeling that Joe totally ignores him until, at the end of the day, Joe asks him to come the next day. Jay is glad to have been noticed by his son. Since Jay can't come to work, it's Claire (Julie Bowen) who has the company in her hands for the day. By a coincidence, it's also the day where parents are allowed to bring their daughters at work.
Rich's verse was characterized as "fluent and graceful, and she expresses emotion with that impress of genuineness and honesty which carries a personal force into the verse. She is deeply engaged in moral motives, and these fill many of her best poems with an inspiring fervor. But she also has the feeling of pure beauty". Her work as an interpreter of nature and humanity was compared to Lucy Larcom and Julia C. R. Dorr.
Yegulalp reserves his harshest words for the unaired Going Too Far, calling it "pure, idiotic, wretched excess." He goes on to say that the episode has "the feeling of trying to deliberately enrage the audience by resorting to the only tactics left: genuinely offensive subject matter." Joel Cunningham at Digitally Obsessed disagrees, saying that the episode succeeds just in time, "with one of the series' funnier sight gags". The series generally receives high marks for technical aspects.
Though Sam is becoming better, Henry has the feeling that he should stay with his helpless grandfather because he himself fears becoming an orphan. While accompanying Sam to church every Sunday he involuntarily becomes part of the town life and gossip again. The town-folks somehow always knew about his sexuality, but never mentioned it publicly. Further complicating the situation is the presence of his former high-school crush Dean Stewart, who moved back in town a week earlier.
Aftenposten wrote that the film had many bright spots, but that the script was too weak. "There are many good things in Gullfjellet; the lines often contradict each other as they may in an active film, the camera moves too quickly, and in many places one has the feeling that the will to make a fresh film was present more than in others. But they were too indulgent toward the screenplay writer and did not cut enough ...."Aftenposten, April 15, 1941, p. 10.
While facing the frontal view in Hellenistic painting was one of many possibilities, it was now the general fashion in Parthian art. The figures are facing the viewer, and even in narrative representations one has the feeling that individual characters no longer interact with each other, but are only directed at the viewer. The perspective that it was in Greek style, has largely been disasserted. A certain space of the figures is only indicated by shading on individual parts of the body.
From the description of its surroundings it is likely that this is the house Severus Snape grew up in, thus making the place the fictitious town of Cokeworth. Snape's front door opens directly into a sitting room that has the feeling of a dark, padded cell, containing walls filled with books, threadbare furniture, and a dim, candle-filled lamp that hangs from the ceiling. A hidden door leads to a narrow staircase. Spinner's End first appears in Half-Blood Prince, when Snape is visited by Bellatrix Lestrange and Narcissa Malfoy.
However, if a person does not consciously remember the context in which he or she learned a particular piece of information and only has the feeling of familiarity towards it, it is called a "know" experience. An example to demonstrate this would be ‘remembering’ what you were doing when you heard a devastating piece of information( eg 9/11) versus ‘knowing’ who the 1st president of the United States is.It is widely believed that recognition has two underlying processes: recollection and familiarity. The recollection process retrieves memories from one's past and can elicit any number of associations of the prior experience ("remember").
The cover of some editions contains a portion of the left panel of Hieronymous Bosch's painting The Garden of Earthly Delights. The cover of other editions contains a modified portion of Lucas Cranach the Elder's painting The Fall. In the first chapter, Snowman utters a reference from Kurt Vonnegut's Slaughterhouse Five: > "It is the strict adherence to daily routine that tends towards the > maintenance of good morale and the preservation of sanity," he says out > loud. He has the feeling he's quoting from a book, some obsolete, ponderous > directive written in aid of European colonials running plantations of one > kind or another.
However, the Rebel gig was cancelled at the last minute and rescheduled for the following Sunday. Writing for Now newspaper, Sumiko Wilson gave the gig a positive review, praising Burna Boy's performance and saying he had "traces of Fela Kuti's signature electric stage presence". Aniefiok Ekpoudom of The Guardian gave a five out of five-star review of the concert at the Wembley Arena in London, writing it "has the feeling of a coronation of Nigeria’s latest musical king". On September 10, 2019, Burna Boy released the music video for "Gum Body", a duet with British singer Jorja Smith.
Starting Out in the Evening has the feeling of a film in which the actors, left to direct themselves, played into their own self-indulgent instincts, and the only one who resisted was the old pro who knew better." Peter Travers of Rolling Stone called the film "remarkable" and said "Langella delivers a master class in acting [with a] deeply felt portrait of a lion in winter." Meghan Keane of The New York Sun stated, "The glowing accolades that the filmmakers attempt to bestow on the novelist Brian Morton ultimately result in an undercooked product . . . [T]he film is unable to re-create the delicate balance of emotions that Mr. Morton created in his book of the same name.
At Metacritic, which assigns a weighted average score out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the album received an average score of 84% based on 5 reviews, indicating "universal acclaim". Steve Shaw of Fact gave the album a 4.5 out of 5, saying, "Black Jazz Signature captures a sheer flood of music, parts crashing and reforming around each other as they break away, jut out, drop back, or lace themselves around others." Michael Harkin of XLR8R gave the album an 8 out of 10, saying, "the mix has the feeling of a continuous, subtly shifting jam that continually stirs and stimulates, much like Parrish's sets behind the decks." Resident Advisor placed it at number 5 on their list of the top 10 official mixes of 2013.
The scale of the book—at over 1,000 pages—ensured the work was not reprinted until 1996, which meant it fell out of public knowledge and few modern writers have written on Bradley or her work. Davidson, who considers The British Housewife "the most interesting of the 18th century English cookery books", thinks "one has the feeling in reading ... [Bradley's] work that here is a real person, communicating effectively with us across the centuries". Lehmann opines that Bradley's personal involvement in developing the recipes stands out in the book. Lehmann, writing in the Dictionary of National Biography considers that > Bradley is one of the most important cookery writers of the eighteenth > century, not only because her book is one of the most comprehensive of its > kind but also because she discusses the merits and difficulties of the > dishes, gives information on European as well as English cookery.
In his book The Sins of Scripture (2009), John Shelby Spong concurs with this argument, insisting, "The whole story of Judas has the feeling of being contrived ... The act of betrayal by a member of the twelve disciples is not found in the earliest Christian writings. Judas is first placed into the Christian story by the Gospel of Mark (), who wrote in the early years of the eighth decade of the Common Era." Most scholars reject these arguments for non-historicity, noting that there is nothing in the gospels to associate Judas with Judeans except his name, which was an extremely common one for Jewish men during the first century, and that numerous other figures named "Judas" are mentioned throughout the New Testament, none of whom are portrayed negatively. Positive figures named Judas mentioned in the New Testament include the prophet Judas Barsabbas (Acts 15:22–33), Jesus's brother Jude (Mark 6:3; Matt 13:55; Jude 1), and the apostle Judas the son of James (Luke 6:14–16; Acts 1:13; John 14:22).

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