Rather, the Massachusetts returnees were young, native born and emotionally attached to their country. |
|
Though financially richer she is emotionally bereft and may never open herself up again. |
|
The most emotionally challenging part for me was the transphobia I encountered from the court attorney who represented me at my arraignment. |
|
Kids who have gone through a traumatic divorce or the loss of a loved one may already be emotionally at risk. |
|
Poor Gabby was stuck in the middle of a love triangle with two emotionally unstable men. |
|
That said there's little otherwise that is excessive in this trim and spare piece of emotionally and visually restrained film-making. |
|
Public tumults and tragedies gradually recede into the past and become less emotionally fraught for all of us. |
|
Of course, it is wrong to nag, pressurise, coax, cajole or emotionally blackmail one's offspring into providing grandchildren. |
|
Unfortunately, it was by turns thrilling and boring, with little else in between to savor emotionally. |
|
He stars as a sound engineer in a happy but bland marriage to an emotionally fragile woman with psychic abilities. |
|
It is blissful to watch grandchildren develop both physically and emotionally with their pluses and minuses. |
|
Without at least one character who affects us emotionally, situation comedy loses all its interest. |
|
Or would they rather emotionally identify with the uncool, harrumphing, self-righteous crowd, who just don't get it? |
|
As well as being emotionally undernourished, the children also did not have adequate facilities. |
|
The Adagio of this quartet is typically soulful, emotionally wrenching music. |
|
He was physically, emotionally, and psychologically abusive, and Flinn was totally unequipped to deal with this. |
|
One can be physically promiscuous without being emotionally unfaithful, flighty, or inconstant. |
|
But community demands more than simply emotionally satisfying bonds between individuals. |
|
He is unstinting but never ungenerous in his depiction of an Italy materially and emotionally ravaged by the second world war. |
|
So the argument against him going to a uni still seems to be based around the idea that he's not emotionally mature yet. |
|
|
Anticipation proved better than the debate itself, with its weak moderation and unintelligent, emotionally charged outbursts. |
|
The stoic philosophy also say to remain uninvolved emotionally in your fate, and you will live an untroubled life. |
|
I watched Natural Born Killers yesterday, and was at once quite impressed by the film itself, yet left emotionally unmoved. |
|
It can be extraordinarily rewarding emotionally and extraordinarily unrewarding financially, which is fine, as long as we survive. |
|
When one is emotionally unstable, alcohol inhibits the ability to confront and solve problems. |
|
The men became uncontrollable, emotionally unstable and dangerously paranoid. |
|
The diagnosis is that of an emotionally unstable borderline personality disorder. |
|
Both emotionally stable and unstable students can benefit from a better understanding of psychology. |
|
People who are emotionally needy or manipulate others to get their own way by making them feeling guilty are unconscious vampires. |
|
What he foolishly chose was an impressionable, unformed and emotionally needy young woman. |
|
She was far from the needy, emotionally damaged wreck who we usually think of as finding refuge in obscure religions. |
|
Jack was needy, emotionally, and looked to Tammy to make him feel better, in and out of bed. |
|
Because she is just so monumentally self-absorbed and needy and emotionally stunted. |
|
People who constantly need to praise themselves are insecure or emotionally needy. |
|
He was faced with the challenge of learning a new way of writing and reading in Braille and had to cope with his visual impairment emotionally. |
|
She also wrote in what must have seemed at the time in an unwomanly way, not being emotionally involved with her characters. |
|
The group arranges social facilities and community support for lonely, mentally and emotionally unwell people. |
|
She sang them with heart and soul and with an intensity and passion that left many in the capacity audience emotionally drained. |
|
To my complete and utter amazement, I felt okay, not just physically but emotionally as well. |
|
There's the Uniform Man, who is emotionally insecure, with a rigid and brittle temperament. |
|
|
Poets, popularly, are delicate petals, emotionally brittle and easily roused. |
|
Some may come from broken homes, alcoholic homes, have emotionally absent parents, etc. |
|
The sparseness of the set does nothing to enhance the already emotionally Spartan feel of the play. |
|
It was roughly at this time I noticed that whenever I spoke emotionally, my speech came slower and slower until grinding to a halt. |
|
In these situations jealousy can seem like a logical reaction to an emotionally violent incident. |
|
This virtuoso short story collection is emotionally uncompromising and stylistically daring. |
|
The viewer of art sees beyond its visceral ingredients and in some sense is intellectually or emotionally engaged. |
|
The viewer sees over the shoulder of one woman, whose fingers splay emotionally in the fore-ground, to the others squatting on the ground. |
|
The controversy over the use of optical aids by early Renaissance painters is crossdisciplinary and emotionally charged. |
|
She was so emotionally overwhelmed that she burst into a relieving flood of tears. |
|
Born in 1626 in Smyrna, Turkey, he was by all accounts a brilliant, charismatic if emotionally volatile man. |
|
Kerry may be highly intelligent, but he is starchy, stiff and emotionally not as skilled. |
|
But now that I am older and emotionally dead inside, these things bother me less and less. |
|
A person who has always been truly alone is one who will be emotionally dead. |
|
Anyone who can listen to Mozart's Requiem Mass without getting shivers up the spine is either physically or emotionally dead. |
|
The grin was gone, and his voice had gone so emotionally dead that it was almost frightening. |
|
He admitted to being emotionally exhausted by the meeting, the official note recorded. |
|
Pipher has noted that adolescent girls tend to report events and occurrences dramatically and emotionally. |
|
Unless you knew the firing was on the way, you will be emotionally off-balance and in a poor position to negotiate. |
|
They are technologically advanced but emotionally sterile, and their sole goal is universal domination. |
|
|
Making suspects out of kids fails to decrease drug use and harms young people physically and emotionally. |
|
He was ill educated, unintelligent, lacking in common sense, careless of his duties, immoral, emotionally retarded and lazy. |
|
With intuitive insight, they will begin to recognize when their body is stiff, sore, tired or emotionally drained. |
|
Some stories told to her by families are heartbreaking and it is hard not to become emotionally involved. |
|
When we are emotionally upset and complain that we can no longer think straight we are in fact quite correct. |
|
But beyond the monetary considerations, her renaming ordeal has also proved emotionally cathartic. |
|
As with Greek drama, it may be emotionally cathartic but it is never soothing. |
|
A child whose behavior is punished may react emotionally, strike back or avoid the person delivering the punishment. |
|
The camera is now a portal through which we may spy cautiously on his hapless world of emotionally isolated human beings. |
|
Most current priests, he claims, aren't miserable as celibates, and they're no more emotionally immature than most men. |
|
But while I know what you do with the information cerebrally, emotionally I don't think I have a clue what to make of the whole thing. |
|
Bahamians are stultified intellectually, emotionally and culturally by the medieval religious environment that politicians have encouraged. |
|
No candidate is more emotionally prepared for the exhilarating highs and debilitating lows of a presidential marathon. |
|
These are not works of an isolate, primitive, or emotionally distraught outsider. |
|
I believe that we women primary care docs attract a higher percentage of emotionally high-maintenance patients than do our male colleagues. |
|
Is care and concern always to be preferred over more emotionally detached ways of relating to others? |
|
Then there is a baffled son, emotionally involved with an overambitious undertaker. |
|
How I long for the spontaneity of those social witticisms or emotionally charged exchanges. |
|
A terrific British cast, working with an emotionally charged script, keeps viewers glued to the screen. |
|
Your child may be emotionally overloaded by her angry feelings and a tantrum seems inevitable as a result. |
|
|
Chromatherapy is available in eight different colour sequences that suffuse the water with emotionally soothing light. |
|
Even the less emotionally suggestible people will be unwilling not to comply when those around them expect it. |
|
In Maelstrom, the main characters are slick, superficial people who deepen emotionally because of the trauma. |
|
This book contains an emotionally riveting, devastatingly honest, and morally compelling answer. |
|
Maybe being emotionally supportive to others over the last few days has left me drained. |
|
In an emotionally choked voice, Mr. Bilheimer said half the people who figured in the film were already dead. |
|
But there were tears in my eyes and I couldn't finish it because I got so emotionally choked, and I just had to sit down. |
|
I was emotionally overcome to see them and after hugs and kisses and tears shed all round, we went back home. |
|
She wasn't emotionally disabled or hysterical but in these day she used to cry almost all the time. |
|
Aniston stars as an emotionally insecure woman who is having an identity crisis after being proposed to by Ruffalo. |
|
Although not all cases involve ill-treatment, research shows neglected children can be scarred emotionally and socially in the long-term. |
|
Safety considerations are more important in children because children are physically and emotionally immature. |
|
Then again I did ask for it I called someone an emotionally immature moron. |
|
So I can afford to wait, even emotionally, until a really good or impassioned idea comes along. |
|
The garbage strike isn't merely a glib metaphor for an economically as well as emotionally pestilent environment, however. |
|
I was absolutely demolished, emotionally wrung dry, incapable of coherent speech for a half-hour or so afterwards. |
|
It came as no surprise to me that this woman's music is deep and emotionally honest, just like her name. |
|
Even then he had responded emotionally, as he would assert, to the deep, piercing sadness of the music. |
|
I sat in silence, trying to compose myself mentally and emotionally for what was sure to be an unnerving event. |
|
While they can be visually striking and often emotionally engaging, they are also infused with a deep sense of pessimism. |
|
|
The feudal system is cloistered and I welcomed the change as it gave me a chance to grow emotionally and spiritually. |
|
Her work is provocative and emotionally wrenching, yet overwhelmingly beautiful and intellectually compelling. |
|
Underlining how emotionally charged the history debate is, the society's building was attacked with a firebomb last week. |
|
He should stick to his high-quality brand and product to keep him fiscally happy and emotionally satisfied. |
|
As a result, the film feels plotless because none of the big moments are big, none resonate emotionally the way they need to. |
|
She estimates that most of us are emotionally involved with five or six old loves at the same time. |
|
Is it different when you are emotionally involved with the person you are producing? |
|
But if you can be friends with people you got involved with emotionally, that's got to be better than not. |
|
Anyway, I am about the last person who should be emotionally involved with anyone right now. |
|
An emotionally confused daughter, a computer-recluse son and a cantankerously flatulent grandfather raise family bickering to an art. |
|
Regaining the Commonwealth 1500m crown in Manchester drained her physically and emotionally. |
|
Yet although the writer pokes fun, he teases the verbally prolix, emotionally costive Huxley as much as he does the earnest Wilberforce. |
|
This was a life-affirming, emotionally and intellectually liberating message, and it took courage and conviction to be the messenger. |
|
We find safety in our technology, even though these shields are cheap tricks, designed to fool us into thinking we are emotionally armored. |
|
The contestants end up bustier, blonder, emotionally frazzled and, often, looking a little drag queenesque. |
|
The room can suddenly fill with terse and emotionally charged crosstalk, sounding much like a hospital emergency room. |
|
All of you who are saying that cry-it-out is emotionally harmful, could you cite your peer-reviewed studies on the subject? |
|
The most emotionally intense love song in the piece is the rapturous hymn delivered by Sweeney to his precious cut-throat razors. |
|
Most reported interventions have begun with assessment of seizure precipitants, looking particularly for emotionally based triggers for seizures. |
|
It's tempting to see parallels between their rich, expressionist daubs and the emotionally charged abstractions of Perelman's restless muse. |
|
|
Statistics show that the death rate among lonely people is twice that of more emotionally fulfilled people. |
|
But I'm not gilding the lily, I truly thought it was impossible, and I refused to address myself emotionally. |
|
Surprised people tend to react emotionally and attacked people tend to react defensively, and you must fight down both urges. |
|
You potentially gave him a disease that could shatter him emotionally and ruin his future relationships while knowing that you were infected. |
|
The experience had a very profound effect on me, both emotionally and spiritually. |
|
Knowledge expands her mind, but emotionally she's about as advanced as a high school prom queen. |
|
When we respond emotionally to situations, for example, we usually do so without extensive deliberative thought or analysis. |
|
They tend to be emotionally demonstrative and seductive, and use their appearance to attract the attention of others. |
|
There's a pattern that some parents exhibit with their children when they themselves have had an emotionally deprived childhood. |
|
In one-third of families where the child was classified as emotionally deprived there was considerable material deprivation as well. |
|
Moreover, we cannot help but feel sorry for the emotionally lonely jeweler who lacks a wife and is deserted even by his housemaid. |
|
Prostitution is a system of slavery that emotionally, spiritually and physically destroys women and girls. |
|
On one or two occasions women have come close to destroying me both emotionally and financially. |
|
Not content to destroy us emotionally, physically and spiritually, they also had to take us down calligraphically too. |
|
If you're able to stay emotionally detached from your investments, this can be a good strategy to follow. |
|
Our English punters couldn't bet on England because of this, but emotionally couldn't bet against them either. |
|
Meggy is impetuous, spoilt, emotionally unfinished and, despite the puppy fat, awkwardly attractive. |
|
Although spectacular, resolving an otherwise kitchen-sink drama with a deus ex machina in the form of a ghost is not emotionally satisfying. |
|
He was returning to the place where he had offered up his most emotionally draining, yet devastatingly insulting proposal to Elizabeth. |
|
It had been an emotionally stressful week, and without her daily devotions and prayer time, she could definitely feel the difference. |
|
|
Her voice is good if not emotionally gripping and her songs have an attractive quality but an edgy stimulant is sadly lacking. |
|
Keeping your personal relationship on even keel during this emotionally dicey period could prove difficult. |
|
Their grief was palpable, for his great-heartedness had touched them financially, morally and emotionally. |
|
Reason told him he had to make a break no matter how emotionally painful the separation might be. |
|
Van Gogh was extremely dependent on his brother, both financially and emotionally. |
|
If the parent or care giver is emotionally distressed, provide relief and support. |
|
This was a romanticized place where masculine types could prove themselves physically and emotionally. |
|
The people trudged through their rainy grey days, repressed and emotionally withdrawn. |
|
While emotionally charged, these canvases seem less paeans to nature than flights of the artist's imagination. |
|
His son plays him like a fiddle, using him as an excuse and emotionally blackmailing him into submission. |
|
Leon's so emotionally numb that all he seems capable of feeling is guilt and rage. |
|
But you sound like you're reacting emotionally, and not really rationally with such a response, but so be it. |
|
White has spoken emotionally in defence of his professional integrity and personal pride. |
|
She emotionally recalls what it was like as a teenager running into her homeless dad on the streets and pretending she didn't know him. |
|
He responded emotionally that he would call former President Carter, with whom he said he was in touch, and started to leave. |
|
Being really, really proud of the music that you've made helps you write emotionally about stuff. |
|
Women's groups seem to behave more aggressively and more emotionally in response to this common perception of feminists as bitter and militant. |
|
Even if I plan ahead for a discussion with my spouse, my boss or my child, I still find myself acting emotionally. |
|
Separation is not psychologically satisfying or emotionally empowering for some individuals. |
|
To her surprise, after their anger had dissipated, they were physically and emotionally more intimate. |
|
|
This will enable you to emotionally dissociate yourself from what is happening. |
|
Making use of the emotionally disturbed in this way has become a distasteful trend on the political left. |
|
Certainly enthralling is the 14-minute, emotionally soaring offering from vocalist Khan. |
|
Added to the system were special classes and treatment opportunities for the emotionally disturbed. |
|
She was known for her ability to teach blind and mentally challenged or emotionally disturbed children, and juvenile delinquents. |
|
Internal reliability of the CDI has been demonstrated with both normal and emotionally disturbed children. |
|
He grows emotionally and spiritually over the course of the piece, and because of that, he's the Everyman here. |
|
Eventually, dog-tired and feeling somewhat mentally and emotionally frazzled, I crawled off to bed around five o'clock in the morning. |
|
Physically exhausted, emotionally drained and severely dehydrated, Ashby started to hallucinate. |
|
We get an extended mental digression from him on how to emotionally distance oneself from crying people. |
|
Then, the other night, while drunk, depressed and emotionally lost, she dropped a bombshell on me. |
|
Most sapiosexual people place a lot of value and emphasis on finding someone who is emotionally intelligent as well. |
|
The less emotionally reactive the couple becomes, the less the therapist structures the enactment. |
|
It has wakened memories and bought it all back and I think it would have been emotionally a bit distressing to have gone. |
|
Her e-mails revealed that she's been in an emotionally abusive relationship for about a year. |
|
These are not easy days, for sitting shiva is emotionally and physically draining. |
|
Learn to accept jealousy as a normal but exaggerated response to a stressful, emotionally charged change in your life. |
|
Kelly told me that, while she was growing up, her father was quiet, distant, and emotionally reserved. |
|
If more people went to the opera, we'd come across as more emotionally mature. |
|
Perhaps it's because of the deluge of words, perhaps it's the weightiness of the subject, but one doesn't actually become involved emotionally. |
|
|
Sensitivity is a good thing but more important is to be emotionally well-balanced. |
|
Ministers are also not required to become emotionally involved, or to throw down ultimatums, or to rattle sabers and make dire threats. |
|
The film also beautifully realizes the unusual, emotionally charged, and heartbreaking romance between Winchell and Addams. |
|
In her own widowhood, she welcomed her surviving sisters, Sophie and Aloysia, to Salzburg and supported them emotionally and materially. |
|
As emotionally complex an issue as cloning animals is, it's also dangerous, perhaps cruel and illegal, and almost totally unregulated. |
|
In fact, for those whose sexual dysfunction is emotionally related albizzia can be very effective. |
|
Some want to believe that this is the moment of reconciliation, that mother and daughter have emotionally reconnected. |
|
His reaction was both emotionally unsparing and radical in its redefinition of musical form. |
|
Perhaps it is the emotionally wounding proximity of him that brings back suppressed memories of the past. |
|
Even more than corporate logos and trademarks, the symbolism embedded in flag design is emotionally, philosophically, and politically charged. |
|
Objectively, he is emotionally labile and becomes jittery and nervous when discussing the ring. |
|
Only emotionally labile noncompliance was a significant predictor of peer rejection. |
|
An illustrative case is a 29-year-old clerical worker in England noted to be depressed, emotionally labile and socially withdrawn. |
|
On a technical level, Scorsese is firing on all cylinders, but emotionally the film is a bit distant. |
|
It might be thought that I am aloof, smug, emotionally cool or that I believe that I am better than anyone else. |
|
When Maria, Ben, Jennifer, Michael and I rendezvoused before the parade, I had no idea how the spirit of carnival would open Michael emotionally. |
|
Paula Fox's fourth novel, The Widow's Children, is the least analyzable and, to my mind, most emotionally satisfying of all her books. |
|
But most residents are still too emotionally bruised to do anything except stare resentfully from a distance. |
|
Traditionally, a musical climax is reached through the emotionally loaded swell of dynamics or harmonic resolution. |
|
The film's most emotionally resonant moment occurs early on, when Drew confronts her parents with her pregnancy. |
|
|
But once people have children, few can ever be truly emotionally free again. |
|
He then explores creating the experience of visiting an emotionally resonant, historic space. |
|
It is an emotionally resonant and compelling personal story, and all of it is true. |
|
Her work in Vera Drake is so fully rounded, richly detailed and emotionally devastating that there really is no competition. |
|
So transsexuals, although born into one gender, will identify emotionally and psychologically with the other. |
|
Their scenes together are ripe with tension, both sexual and dramatic, and their relationship develops in emotionally intricate ways. |
|
There's also space for keyboards, strings and other textures to dip in and out amongst the emotionally charged vocals and haunting guitar lines. |
|
Given the vantage point of 35 years, LeWitt's art scarcely seems emotionally dry. |
|
It is only through the force of the emotionally apprehended that he can perceive the world. |
|
We should guard against emotionally driven demands to kill many bystanders in an effort to liquidate our enemy. |
|
Hill's is a thematic biography, moving emotionally as much as argumentatively. |
|
I haven't read the work in question, but this seems like a respectful way to talk about an emotionally loaded word, and how it got that way. |
|
For instance, compared to depressed people, emotionally healthy people have an unrealistically rosy outlook. |
|
As long as her second husband kept his trysts private and emotionally uninvolving, she was willing to look the other way. |
|
Bear in mind I was very tired and emotionally overwrought when I wrote this blog, my imagination may have run away with itself. |
|
The characters are atomized, alienated, hollow, cut off emotionally from each other and from themselves. |
|
As we have seen, emotionally autumn is a time to be aware of and release our sadness and grief. |
|
But nevertheless, she has written emotionally charged music with lyrical directness. |
|
In this sense, his authorial interventions served, in his own mind, to create an emotionally authentic text. |
|
As she becomes more emotionally involved the little madam becomes mercilessly manipulative and demanding. |
|
|
Whether in strophic arias, simple canzonettas or elaborate madrigals, Kiehr's singing is effortlessly lush and nicely emotionally understated. |
|
Carrying a baby for nine months is very taxing, emotionally and physically. |
|
The flight-training program that normally took three years was condensed to a physically and emotionally taxing six months. |
|
They were emotionally troubled, or socially maladjusted, or marginal in some more or less unattractive way, or quaintly anachronistic. |
|
It includes some of the most emotionally creative and technically brilliant music alongside the bland and inane. |
|
He is rather like me, a true skeptic whose passion for questioning emotionally held beliefs and outspokenness makes him many dangerous enemies. |
|
In most cases toddlers already know how to emotionally manipulate their parents and most stop crying very soon after the parent has left. |
|
He rejected it emotionally, but he did not advance a single tenable argument. |
|
His trip back to Peru is emotionally scintillating, as are his reflections on the passage of time and the vagaries of memory. |
|
Maddie might soon swing back to being emotionally distant, but the current thaw in their relations is a positive beginning. |
|
Because when we're emotionally bankrupt by virtue of having burned ourselves out, then we have nothing to give. |
|
The therapist encouraged her to feel free either to move closer to him physically and emotionally during this process or to move away. |
|
His concentration on style, however, leaves us with an emotionally tinny thespian drama. |
|
Usually, performances that are considered brave rely on physical nudity to let the audience know that the actor is emotionally bare. |
|
He is now mature enough emotionally to reside in the men's house without need of running home to be with his mother. |
|
It's impossible to project how players will physically grow and mature emotionally. |
|
He turned his back towards me as if distancing himself emotionally from me. |
|
When I was dating the man who would become my third husband, I finally felt self-sufficient emotionally. |
|
You are very rooted internally, and emotionally self-sufficient, regardless of how chaotic or unstable your circumstances may become. |
|
The stunning and grandiose set compliments the beauty of Puccini's emotionally melodic score. |
|
|
He makes sure we're emotionally involved before we're intellectually engaged, rendering his epic memorably intimate. |
|
The guidelines dictate that emotionally charged topics be avoided on tests, for fear that mention of them might upset sensitive children. |
|
The facts should be carefully separated from opinion and used in a language those people can emotionally relate to. |
|
She closed the door behind his large frame, then leaned back against and closed her eyes, emotionally drained. |
|
But there has to be something about the character that strikes a chord in you emotionally. |
|
He read voraciously, including several diaries written by English volunteers, and wanted to create scenes that were both historically accurate and emotionally convincing. |
|
Understanding how much another person hurts emotionally is good and bad. |
|
Her accents were pretty flawless, even in the most emotionally fraught scenes, but when you are in a class of your own, the critics are that much fiercer. |
|
All elements of his sprawling film resonate with each other intellectually, emotionally, and viscerally, while notably avoiding concrete statements of theme. |
|
Specifically, across cultures women have been shown to be on average more emotionally responsive, more socially attuned, and more verbally gifted than men. |
|
If they have to cope with the loss of their friends, teachers and even parents, they will cling physically and emotionally to the remaining adults and carers in their lives. |
|
The introduction of card sharp Remo may seem like an obvious attempt at stacking the deck, both figuratively and emotionally, but this is part of Argento's way. |
|
The more feminine, the more emotionally sensitive, the finer the fingerprint. |
|
The narrator, a Nigerian psychiatry student, is emotionally distant, ruminative, and intellectual. |
|
He runs away and never comes back, emotionally damaged beyond repair. |
|
Congratulations and thank you to all those talented actors, musicians and movie makers involved for such an emotionally stirring and historical event. |
|
It's about the emotionally primal battle between good and evil. |
|
The film is gripping and emotionally wrenching, but it focuses one-sidedly on the suffering and death of Jesus and hardly deals with the Resurrection. |
|
There are celebrity judges to wrangle and emotionally wrecked contestants to coax coherent interviews from. |
|
The square and the cube are abstract, they're mathematical forms, measurements, perimeters, boundaries, mental constructs, and as such, are emotionally unknowable. |
|
|
Reading the narratives, one is left with the sense that the choice to abstain from all sexual involvements was more emotionally driven for women than for men. |
|
Historically, there has been an emphasis on behavioral, operant techniques to control the behavior of learning disabled and emotionally handicapped students. |
|
You hurt him emotionally, and you ruptured the trust between you. |
|
He was emotionally flatlined in meetings, practices, on the sideline. |
|
It seems to me intellectually entirely consistent, emotionally true in lots of ways, and unbelievable only on the balance of probabilities, which is no disproof at all. |
|
The sexist expects men to be ambitious, aggressive, dominant, economically self-sufficient, excited by sports and money, lustful, and emotionally strong. |
|
Despite the predictable salacious stories of Hollywood, the most explosive and emotionally affecting part of this book involves Eszterhas' father. |
|
Individual scientists are not emotionally detached from their research. |
|
Show me a folk music audience and I'll show you the emotionally needy. |
|
You cannot become emotionally aware just by thinking about it. |
|
Silver Linings Playbook allowed her to explode, playing a woman unhinged, histrionic, and emotionally volatile. |
|
The result is a more emotionally accessible, less regimented film that should appeal to thriller lovers who don't usually cotton to his eccentricities. |
|
In most cases the parents are physically incapacitated through drugs or drink or mentally and emotionally destroyed by having suffered themselves as children. |
|
Why do people respond emotionally to films that they know are fictional? |
|
And then, in an emotionally tense few seconds, sobbing, she completes the final hang power clean, barely standing upright. |
|
Like Cherise, who missed her father and made no secret about it, Lindiwe was open emotionally, never hiding the fact that she missed her husband and child. |
|
His transformation is startling, both emotionally and physically. |
|
Unfortunately it was merely the not inconsiderable technical prowess of his dancers that Page showed off in his emotionally inexpressive choreography. |
|
It is still hard to fathom how it is that people can be so tempestuous, so very emotionally self-indulgent, around those who really shouldn't be expected to put up with it. |
|
Some of the most emotionally engaging or memorable songs are duets. |
|
|
If crying is not physiologically beneficial, what then is the purpose of emotionally aroused tears? |
|
It's icing on the, well, ice that the film's story is as emotionally cascading as the setting. |
|
Just because conception takes place in a laboratory test tube, it is no less emotionally fraught for the couple concerned and no less morally taxing for the rest of us. |
|
I feel out of sorts and all over the place mentally and emotionally. |
|
These individuals are emotionally robust despite their shy demeanour, and they have high standards for themselves, which is why they can seem cranky and irritable. |
|
There's virtue to such curiosity and research, but it could also leave an exhausted writer holding an emotionally bankrupt manuscript in calloused hands. |
|
The romantic opening theme that sets the scene for this core is typical Warbeck, an emotionally inflexed tune of great beauty and sentimental charm. |
|
I found it emotionally and physically draining because sometimes we filmed in subzero conditions in New York. |
|
Beware of overdoing anything, or going over the top emotionally. |
|
He'd been beat, bled, and bruised emotionally, but never physically. |
|
In keeping with Finder's emotionally realistic tone, the artwork avoids the heavily thewed men and exaggerated supermodel women beloved of superhero comics. |
|
Yuichi Hattori, M.A., a psychologist currently treating 18 patients with the disorder, believes that hikikomori is caused by emotionally neglectful parenting. |
|
As a student, Telegdi often raised quite a stir with his emotionally charged attempts to raise student interest in issues such as housing and enumeration. |
|
Like most Decembers in the northern United States, the weather was bitterly cold, and Burdick struggled emotionally because she was over 150 miles away from her family. |
|
She believed that horses would be emotionally damaged if it was not explained to them that their riders meant no harm nor wished to degrade them in any way. |
|
The relatively recent death of his wife at the hands of a drunk driver has left Harry alone and emotionally drained, with only his job giving his life purpose and meaning. |
|
During the emotionally charged gathering, a statue was unveiled. |
|
Egewe had discerned that a part of the reason for this was that Kjarian did not entirely trust the empath, and so he was largely emotionally guarded when within his presence. |
|
No issue is quite as emotionally charged as the issue of child abuse. |
|
And even though Oberst invokes cell phones and other touches of modernity, he manages to have written something melodically and emotionally timeless. |
|