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Discover LudwigThe phrase "feel apart" is not grammatically correct and is not commonly used in written English
The correct phrase is "fall apart," meaning to break or fail. Here is an example: "The old building was starting to fall apart, with crumbling walls and a leaking roof."
Exact(16)
If you feel apart from society it is more difficult to make those connections.
To feel apart, even isolated, is not uncommon for a Muslim from Schaerbeek, the third-poorest commune in Belgium and one with a long history of racism.
Whereas ironic consumers feel apart and above the cultural object, a camp sensibility allows a viewer to identify with the creators of the movie or television show.
It's work of pure genius like this that seem so simple...a story of a toy coming alive yet it draws you in and feel apart of it.
"It's an expression of kids looking beyond, wanting different answers, wanting to feel apart from the dominant culture here, which is pretty serious, upper middle class and driven," he says.
Now that generation has come of age, and there's a third burgeoning – but while to the outsider they may appear fully integrated into the culture, there's no doubt many feel apart in this place, which is itself so profoundly apart.
Similar(44)
I never felt apart from him".
Often, I felt apart and alone.
The studio deal eventually felt apart.
You sense that Majda feels apart from all this.
Jonathan felt apart from it, unable to communicate with anyone there.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com