словарь английский - английский

English - English

feel на английском языке:

1. felt


I felt hungry.
It wasn't until then that I felt really frightened.
Though I was sitting in the sun, I still felt chilly.
I remember the horror I felt when she screamed.
I can imagine how you felt.
They welcomed me warmly, so I felt at home.
The child's body felt feverish.
He felt that the reason he was able to succeed was because of his friends' help.
The mayor felt that he should look into the loss of income from parking meters.
During the test, she felt very sick, so she got a pass to go to the toilet.
She advised him to stop taking that medicine, but he felt he needed to.
Because he doesn't want to marry her, she felt a distance between them.
I was playing a game when I felt an earthquake.
I feel happier than I've ever felt before.
I felt it was a relatively difficult jigsaw puzzle.

Английский слово "feel«(felt) встречается в наборах:

Czasowniki regularne i nie regularne
KBG A1 irregular verbs
czasowniki nieregularne
Irregular verbs

2. fall


It's fall now.
Despite Trang's constant affirmations of love, Spenser is still afraid someday she will fall out of love with him.
There are mothers and fathers who will lie awake after the children fall asleep and wonder how they'll make the mortgage, or pay their doctor's bills, or save enough for their child's college education.
As a boy, I spent several years in Indonesia and heard the call of the azaan at the break of dawn and the fall of dusk.
With bronze as a mirror one can dress neatly; with the example of another person one can see the advantages and disadvantages of himself; from the mirror of history one can know the reason for the rise and fall of states.
Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall. Humpty Dumpty had a great fall. All the king's horses and all the king's men couldn't put Humpty Dumpty together again.
In Korea, there's a popular theory that says that: "If you eat a quarter of an Iceberg lettuce, you will fall asleep". Thus, amongst truck drivers in Korea, lettuce is known as something that should not be eaten before work.
In the fall, when the days grew shorter and the nights colder, she watched the first frost turn the leaves to bright yellow and orange and red.
When bad men combine, the good must associate; else they will fall one by one, an unpitied sacrifice in a contemptible struggle.
A strong veteran, having trained for tens of years, can fall to a weakling in a moment of laxness. That's what the martial arts world is.
Insurance makes us remember that the world we live in isn't completely safe; we might fall ill, face danger or encounter the unexpected.
Somehow, a nearly bankrupt third-party publisher flashed the new Castlevania game onto the memory incompletely. As a result, an entire generation of kids in Macon, Georgia unanimously condemned it as "Simon Does Nothing but Fall into a Bottomless Pit."
For us, English was the language to fall back on when we couldn't make ourselves understood in French.
What a glorious fall day. This is what they mean by the lovely weather you get after a storm.
Let's resist the temptation to fall back on the same partisanship and pettiness and immaturity that has poisoned our politics for so long.

Английский слово "feel«(fall) встречается в наборах:

English pronunciation 1.3
irregular verbs
Angl past form