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Discover LudwigThe phrase "absolutely felt like" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to express a strong or definitive feeling about a situation or experience.
Example: "After the long meeting, I absolutely felt like I needed a break to recharge."
Alternatives: "truly felt like" or "definitely felt like".
Exact(4)
For me it absolutely felt like the right thing to do.
It absolutely felt like a BBC One show and they loved the idea so we began development.
I absolutely felt like a kid again sitting on the lion pictured below.
That's such a beautiful message, and I absolutely felt like this was the ballet we were destined to create.
Similar(56)
I absolutely feel like I'm contributing.
"It absolutely feels like a missed opportunity," he admitted.
"I absolutely feel like they dropped the ball out there and, yeah, they took my son from me out there," he added.
I have never owned a real, live Versace dress, but when I wear this one I absolutely feel like I'm wearing Versace.
If you absolutely feel like you need a second page, make sure you are using that space wisely, knowing that a possible employer may not pay much attention to the second page.
The relentless spitballing yields sporadic snorts, but with women reduced to walk-on titparts between stale knob gags, it absolutely feels like the bromance's final, desperate throbs: Adam Scott's televised sodomy and subsequent testicle-lancing mark but two instances where we pass beyond risqué hijinks into the realms of the flatly horrible.
"I absolutely feel like a survivor," he told BBC Radio 5 live's Adrian Chiles.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com