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Discover LudwigThe phrase "always apprehension" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a constant state of anxiety or fear regarding a situation or outcome.
Example: "Despite the reassurances from her friends, she felt always apprehension about the upcoming exam."
Alternatives: "constant anxiety" or "perpetual fear".
Exact(3)
When the top sides go to places like Edgar Street there's always apprehension, but really our team had enough quality; our 2-0 defeat of Manchester United the following Saturday proved that.
Yet there is always apprehension inside Old Trafford whenever Phil Jones or Chris Smalling has to bring the ball out of defence and once again one saw the hard evidence that United have neglected this area of the team.
"I'd go into the grocery store," Williams said, "and people would say things like, 'If you guys go 6-6 that year, that would be really good.' The other thing is, you could always see in the eyes of people, players included, that until the very final second in a game, there was always apprehension.
Similar(57)
Coleridge said that Shakespeare always made apprehension predominate over surprise, and this is what Donna Tartt does.
But there is always the apprehension that the brinkmanship which comes with the Russian challenges will lead to a mistake by one side or the other.
"There is always that apprehension of state surveillance, but I also think that that can then be used this whole question of privacy it can be used as an excuse for any number of things that are going on in the sites of power that are not in citizens' best interests".
It depends on Buridan's epistemological claim that general notions are always involved in apprehension, and that what makes an apprehension singular is the 'confusion' or fusing together of circumstances, so that being a man is not abstracted from being here and now in such and such a way.
Each of these tales is, in its first couple of pages, marvelous; Bierce is a master of apprehension, always alert to threat.
"Such cases always excite my apprehension.
(7) Thus, they would always unfold the Apprehension-Perception of Plebeians for themselves (Cheng, Chapter 7). .
And, perhaps, in the truest spirit of travel, I will walk through it, sometimes with apprehension, but always with curiosity and a tingle of excitement.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com