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felt English

Meaning felt meaning

What does felt mean?
Definitions in simple English

felt

Felt is a cloth made of wool or of wool and fur.

felt

a fabric made of compressed matted animal fibers cover with felt felt a cap mat together and make felt-like felt the wool (= felt up, mat) change texture so as to become matted and felt-like The fabric felted up after several washes

Synonyms felt synonyms

What other words have the same or similar meaning as felt?

Topics felt topics

What do people use felt to talk about?

Examples felt examples

How do I use felt in a sentence?

Simple sentences

The doctor felt his pulse.
I felt refreshed after showering.
His mother felt ashamed for him.
He felt at home.
I felt like I was dead.
I just felt a drop of rain.
It's the first time in my life I've felt so connected with someone.
Tom felt humiliated.
Tom felt someone tap him on the shoulder.
Tom felt guilty.
I felt the same way.
I felt coldness even though I was sitting in the sun.
Mary felt like Tom was undressing her with his eyes.
Though his stay in Europe was transient, Spenser felt he had learned much more about interactions with other people from traveling than he did at college.
I can imagine how you felt.
I felt hungry.
I felt the sweat trickle down my brow.
As I felt cold, I put on my overcoat.
The air felt a little cold.
When I came home, I felt very hungry.
As soon as he felt his house shake, he rushed out into the garden.
I felt the house shake.
I felt tired from having worked for hours.
I felt something crawling on my back.
I felt something touch my feet.
Because she felt sick.
Even though I felt that there was something strange, I just didn't know what it was.
We felt the house shake.

Movie subtitles

It felt like a threat.
When I saw that look in his eyes, I just felt that I needed to take a step back.
Never felt better.
And I felt so bad.
Yeah, I felt it, too.
Now I know what those poor bastards in the '90s felt like.
Yeah, we killed him with a felt-tip pen.
We felt-tip penned him to death.
Regardless, I felt very conflicted.
And I've never felt very Irish.
I felt sick when I saw them, and they're better off than Susan.
Is what I felt in there what other people feel when they see her?
I swear, I've never felt better.
And I'll warrant you've never felt more scared.
It all felt very real.
Because before when I felt helpless, I would just, like, take whatever drug I could get my hands on and disappear.
It's strange. I'd forgotten what pain like this felt like.
So even the pain I felt, that was an illusion.
I only wanted to go for a ride and see how it felt to drive such a car.
I felt if I told you it would inform your behavior with him.
And ever since that moment, I just felt. Sorry for you.
Spoke to her, offered her gold, a lot of gold, still I felt like the beggar asking for alms.
She stated that she felt as if she were fighting against an unknown force stronger than her own.
He felt like a criminal.
It felt like someone was watching over me.
I felt someway that you'd come.
Not me. I never felt better in my life.
Providing you several all connection with Oliver Hardy, whom your Uncle felt is responsible for your deplorable condition.
I guess I felt bad that his supposed friend was betraying him and what my brother was doing to him, but I was just trying to do him a favour.
Scott has never felt this way about a girl before.
They felt that something is wrong seeing us so close to them, so now the Americans have come forward, isn't it?
Thank you. Seeing Master falling for you was like my child growing up well under the sun, so I felt really good.
BUT I FELT I HAD TO COME DOWN AND EXPRESS SOME CONCERNS. WELL, I'VE GOT IT UNDER CONTROL.
Never felt better. Uh-huh.
It felt so damn good.

News and current affairs

Yet 2008-2009, like 1989, may very well correspond to an epochal change, whose unfolding consequences will be felt for decades.
The extraordinary reception of Thomas Piketty's Capital in the Twenty-First Century shows how keenly the consequences of the collapse of the left have been felt.
Because it normally takes a year or more for the full effects of monetary policy to be felt, central banks need to act preemptively, not reactively.
That sour sense of rejection, felt by many confused youths, turns for some into a fierce desire for vengeance.
Some did so because they felt poorer.
In short, the scientific evidence is strong and growing that the planet is at grave risk, with many ill effects already being felt and more to come.
Thirty years later, some of the consequences are still being felt.
Equally important, these women felt - and acted upon - the moral necessity of actually governing.
Sharon and you might have felt that unilateral action was needed in Gaza, but the withdrawal from Gaza could have produced many more benefits for both sides had it been done bilaterally.
The repercussions of this miscarriage of justice may be felt for a long time.
Europeans have felt oppressed by America's excessive demonstration of hard power.
A whole generation felt that the moment had come when Hungarians could at last determine their own future.
In the 2008 election, Americans felt disillusioned by the Bush administration's war in Iraq, and by the financial crisis that erupted two months before the vote.
As long as people felt that they were getting richer, demands for more freedom of speech, better protection of human rights, and the right to vote could be postponed.
Neither the state nor the people quite knew how they felt about Afghanistan or Chernobyl - one a lost war, the other an incomprehensible catastrophe.
No surprise, then, that millions of Burundians felt alienated, and that many resorted to violence.
The slowness with which the first stimulus has been rolled out, and the fact that it will take even more time for its full effects to be felt, provides more fodder for the chattering classes.
But the impact of America's planned troop withdrawals is felt most keenly in South Korea.
The general shift from defined-benefit pension plans to defined-contribution plans meant that employees felt the effect of rising share prices directly in their own personal accounts.
The resulting humiliation and blatant mistrust that Russia's elite has felt ever since has led them to their current policy of rearmament.
More importantly, according to the UN and the World Bank, the social impact of the global economic crisis continues to be felt in terms of rising hunger, unemployment, and social unrest.
But, despite past US administrations' opportunity to make their influence felt, they preferred to permit Israel, an allied, friendly state, to do what it wanted.
Li concluded his statement with the message, delivered via three lines by two canonical Chinese poets from the ancient Tang and Song dynasties, that his home was where he felt safe.
Under mounting public scrutiny, government officials felt compelled to promise that those responsible will be brought to justice.
However tough things looked in the past, I have never felt such a sense of despair about Palestine and Israel.

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