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Discover Ludwig"ceasing to feel" is a grammatically correct phrase and can be used in written English
It means to stop or no longer experience a certain emotion or physical sensation. Example: After being in shock for several minutes, I could feel my heart rate returning to normal and the numbness in my hands ceasing to feel.
Exact(1)
Merriam Webster describes it as "ceasing to feel resentment against an offender".
Similar(56)
I watched the blocks pass with the hopeful feeling that soon the city would cease to feel new again.
Long after he ceased to feel the movement of time, he faded completely from its progress.
"Christopher had long ago ceased to feel comfortable with his friends on the left".
That way I'll cease to feel self-conscious about my technophobia.
Several months into her work, however, her project ceased to feel like a celebration.
And if we ceased to feel abused, we could fall in love with America again.
To solve this problem, consume increasing dosages of psychotropic medications until you cease to feel emotions of any kind.
At some point, it ceased to feel like much of one, as the game intersected with real life.
If you treat people like subjects, it is hardly surprising that they cease to feel like citizens.
"Very quickly — sometimes within minutes or even seconds — hibakusha began to undergo a process of 'psychic closing-off'; that is, they simply ceased to feel".
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com