How To Use Nearness In A Sentence

  • The lessons of self-distrust, of the nearness to one another of the most opposite emotions in our weak natures, of the depth of gloom into which the boldest and brightest servant of God may fall as soon as he loses hold of God's hand, never had a more striking instance to point them than that mighty prophet, sitting huddled together in utter despondency below the solitary retem bush, praying his foolish prayer for death. Expositions of Holy Scripture Deuteronomy, Joshua, Judges, Ruth, and First Book of Samuel, Second Samuel, First Kings, and Second Kings chapters I to VII
  • As for Varanasi, the constant nearness of death seems to have affected the pace of life here.
  • He can see nothing, but he can feel the nearness of the Spider - sharpness pricking at his throat with unexpected care.
  • With that animal instinct of nearness, which is neither sight, nor smell, my favorite broncho put forward his ears and whinnied sharply. Lords of the North
  • The self-discipline that had kept her upright and functioning deserted her, as though his nearness was a drug so potent it robbed her bones of stuffing and reduced her to limp surrender. The Rich Man's Royal Mistress
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  • By this means there arises a kind of contrariety in our method of thinking, from the different points of view, in which we survey the object, and from the nearness or remoteness of those instants of time, which we compare together. A Treatise of Human Nature
  • He was suddenly aware of his nearness.
  • `The nearness of war took the heat off the search for the thief, and von Keller returned to his regiment completely unsuspected. A DAYSTAR OF FEAR
  • He comes from the infinite distance of the eternal heavens to finite nearness, wrapped in swaddling cloths and laid in a manger (Luke 2: 7). Lieberman: I'll back health care bill without Medicare expansion
  • It may be there was something humble in my stintless adoration; it may be I was like a child for the pleasure of her nearness; it may be my eyes told all too well of the fire that burned within me, but O, the girl was kind, gentler than forgiveness, sweeter than all heaven. The Trail of '98 A Northland Romance
  • There had been no passing events to serve as chronological milestones, and the evening on which she had kept supper waiting for him still loomed out with startling nearness in their retrospects. A Changed Man
  • Base value for land depends on productivity with adjustments for nearness to urban areas, ecological conditions, availability of infrastructure, etc.
  • But when I worked I felt him behind me, his breath stirring my hair, and his nearness sending chills down my spine.
  • It came down within a few feet of the ground - as far down as possible, considering the nearness of the house and the limited space.
  • Defined always by the nearness of Mexico to its borders, the town of Roswell participates in this fear and fantasy.
  • He was like a child coming back to the sense of an enveloping presence: her nearness was a breast on which he leaned. The Touchstone
  • These prayer-seeking travelers take us with them as they retrace the journeys of early and modern saints whose love of God has drawn them and countless others into the stillness, the inner quiet that avails a profound sense of God's utter and absolute nearness. Scott Cairns: Mysteries Of The Jesus Prayer
  • His touch sent a tremor of excitement through her, alerting her of his nearness, but she reprimanded herself.
  • All the while I was acutely aware of her nearness.
  • Our faithful little tomcat had evidently sensed its nearness the previous evening and was petrified almost out of his wits, but he stood his ground and didn't run away, perhaps being unable to move from fright.
  • To the aged, you must do more to disgrace this present world, and make them apprehensive of the nearness of their change, and the aggravations of their sin, if they shall live and die in ignorance or impenitency. The Reformed Pastor
  • Thanks to this SMS, and to the relative nearness and accessiblity of the venue, I attended the Buklat Bulilit Children's Book Festival last August 1, 2009, at Trinoma, sponsored by, among others, the PBBY and the NBDB. Archive 2009-08-01
  • It's gotten to the stage where I'm completely engrossed and starting to regret the nearness of the final page.
  • The nearness of the election has worked very well for him.
  • His big hand on mine, all I could concentrate on was the heat radiating from him, his nearness warming not just my flesh, but my soul.
  • An interesting memoir of life as a Chinese girl growing up in California, very much concentrating on the Chinese family background and history, including untold stories, the nearness of myth and of symbolism, the alienness of the Californian environment (the "ghosts" of the title are non-Chinese people). July Books 24) The Plotters, by Gareth Roberts
  • All the while I was acutely aware of her nearness.
  • The inheritance tax is graduated into three classes according to the ‘nearness’ of family connection.
  • The signal of another steamship is a warning of the one; the answering echo announces the nearness of the other. Wealth of the World's Waste Places and Oceania
  • These conditions, with the nearness of the declivities of the western mountains, and the proximity of the enemy's frontier, behind which movements of troops would be "curtained" -- to use a graphic military metaphor -- gave the Story of the War in South Africa 1899-1900
  • This willed nearness to conscious and unconscious life of her fiction — such that her first literary foray is a story about making a new life and her subsequent fictions sustain a bare minimum of grief-stricken life — can be construed as a phantasy that sustains her work of un/mourning. Attached to Reading: Mary Shelley's Psychical Reality
  • On the other hand, I feel so clearly a certain nearness, spiritually and psychologically, to Henry Stuart–well, I guess there is even an emotional counterpart, too. Sonny Brewer - An interview with author
  • I actually like club hopping, and the nearness of the other club in the place meant that I was back and forth between them a lot.
  • But that nearness is better than farness I know: 122 The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • It is, in short, nearness to God -- the blessed assurance which God Himself can alone give that He is there, whatever our cold doubts may say -- that the everlasting arms are around us, even when we do not feel their quiet and strong embrace. Some Facts of Religion and of Life: Sermons Preached before Her Majesty the Queen in Scotland, 1866-76.
  • Has there ever been higher expression of the overwhelming nearness and glory of God?
  • This series of sonnets instantiates the physical nearness and reality of that satisfied love, rather than the distant longing of the courtly tradition.
  • Residents claim the location is unsuitable because of its isolation, its nearness to the Leeds-Liverpool canal and a lack of public transport.
  • Not from cold, not from pain, just from the nearness of him that sent shudders lightly through her body.
  • Let your love see me even through the barrier of nearness.
  • Moved out of herself by the nearness of death, the titled dame had reverted to childish days, speaking her thoughts aloud. All Aboard A Story for Girls
  • Outsiders envy our nearness to the lake and the life's-a-holiday vibe, even as they see it as a distant outpost, some eastern outpost of the moon.
  • His nearness in itself was unnerving, the warm heat radiating from his body…
  • The warmth whelms from the nearness of arms, backs, necks, breasts; not from fire.
  • Base value for land depends on productivity with adjustments for nearness to urban areas, ecological conditions, availability of infrastructure, etc.
  • The jagged rock he'd sought was three feet up the incline, inviting, tantalizing him with its nearness.
  • (Jer 3: 1, 3; Eze 23: 35), is contrasted with his, who finds happiness in nearness to God (Jas 4: 8), and his delightful work the declaration of Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
  • Something uplifting in the criminal action of the girl so touched Frederick that the nearness of tears called a throb to his throat. Tess of the Storm Country
  • But on the edges of the Empire this decivilization became a definite barbarism, owing to the nearness of wild neighbours who were ready to destroy as deafly and blindly as things are destroyed by fire. A Short History of England
  • Other times, it brings hurt, because that nearness is not near enough. If Prayers Were Horses, Grievers Would Ride - Her Bad Mother
  • But like many town centres, it has suffered because of its nearness to thriving Manchester city centre and the Trafford Centre.
  • Snow, says Kenny, is common here, despite the nearness of the coast.
  • The surface sense of strangeness between them, the undersense of intimate nearness -- thrilling as it was -- made speech astonishingly difficult. Far to Seek A Romance of England and India
  • He points to the nearness of hiking trails and the range of activities as a hidden strength.
  • The high-backed, luxuriously upholstered seat of brown leather gave her a sense of great comfort; yet even greater, it seemed to her, was the nearness and comfort of the man himself and of his body. CHAPTER XIX
  • The very thought of being _aground_ comforted some, for, to their minds, it implied nearness to land, and _land_ was, in their idea, safety. The Coxswain's Bride also, Jack Frost and Sons; and, A Double Rescue
  • Ambient space plays a major role in inducing sadharanikarana, or that delicate balance between distance and nearness, essential for objectifying emotion.
  • There's no sense of a spatial void needing to be filled - no sense of that odd, claustrophobic nearness that can come from silence.
  • It was founded with the same rules and for the same end as that of the city of Lisboa, and others that were begun in imitation of the latter in Portuguese India -- whence it must have been introduced here on account of its nearness to, and communication with, these islands. The Philippine Islands, 1493-1898 — Volume 20 of 55 1621-1624 Explorations by early navigators, descriptions of the islands and their peoples, their history and records of the catholic missions, as related in contemporaneous books and manuscripts, showing

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