Get Free Checker

How To Use Feel out In A Sentence

  • She was starting to feel out of place in her dress slacks and matching jacket.
  • So, if you want to get close, maybe try to feel out her worldview before you feel her up.
  • These activists don't want to feel out of the loop.
  • They can still feel out of place, clumsy and awkward. Times, Sunday Times
  • They can still feel out of place, clumsy and awkward. Times, Sunday Times
Enhance Your English Writing Skills
Fix common errors and boost your confidence in every sentence.
Get started
for free
Enhance Your English Writing Skills
  • A moment — and the darkness would reign in her as before; her eyes glower, her fingers feel out graspingly-how much? she would say. The Growth of the Soil
  • A lot of the group who often feel outsiders in their professional lives are offered a sense of being insiders for a change.
  • They can still feel out of place, clumsy and awkward. Times, Sunday Times
  • Mr. ERIC ABAIR (Shrimper): We've got way too much oil in the Gulf not accounted for, and basically the way we feel out here, until it's all gone in the Gulf, nothing should be cut back. Incoming BP Chief: Time To Scale Back Cleanup
  • Troth, my Lord maun be turned feel outright," said the domestic, "an he puts himsell into sic a carfuffle, for onything ye could bring him, The Antiquary — Complete
  • They can still feel out of place, clumsy and awkward. Times, Sunday Times
  • They can still feel out of place, clumsy and awkward. Times, Sunday Times
  • This time of the year we are besieged with ills and chills, and tend to feel out-of-sorts and a little run down.
  • “Troth, my Lord maun be turned feel outright,” said the domestic, “an he puts himsell into sic a carfuffle, for onything ye could bring him, Edie.” The Antiquary
  • Drivers of course should obey the law and have always griped about tickets, but Americans rightly feel outraged when they believe others game the system to use the law as a way to pick their pockets. Phineas Baxandall: In the Public Interest: Problems With Privatized Law Enforcement's New Frontier
  • If this had happened to a friend you'd feel outraged at him taking advantage of her. The Sun
  • He began to feel out of his depth, as if the chair beneath him were being lowered into a pool of boiling off.
  • ` ` Troth, my Lord maun be turned feel outright, '' said the domestic, ` ` an he puts himsell into sic a carfuffle, for onything ye could bring him, Edie. '' The Antiquary
  • Decent young people would feel outraged that they were having to suffer because of a mindless minority. The Sun
  • I feel out of my element talking about politics.
  • And once he heard the troll's slithering sound dimmish down toward the end of the tunnel, he began to try again to feel out the knots, using what slight movement he had in his fingers, in the case that the troll might have redone its work and left him a knot in reach ... The Goblin Mirror
  • I'm beginning to feel out of patience.
  • Women would feel outraged that the government was intruding its will into the interior of their bodies.
  • But you have to be a real wizard in the kitchen to be able to turn a box of random ingredients into a meal that would not feel out of place at a fancy restaurant.
  • It is not only women who feel outraged. Times, Sunday Times
  • Over the next four years he made further visits to New York to feel out the market.

Report a problem

Please indicate a type of error

Additional information (optional):