Sentence examples for feel more obliged from inspiring English sources

Exact(5)

Bookman half-jokingly suggests that a third reason that city and state governments are embracing its services is peer pressure; when a neighboring city employs the technology and others "see them achieving so much more with so much less," they feel more obliged to do something.

A shared freedom to initiate teleconversations is likely to transform expectations and obligations between professionals and patients [ 22, 26]: when patients expect continuous access, professionals feel more obliged to be present and to respond quickly and accurately.

Perhaps physicians feel more obliged to tap the full potential of pharmacological treatment in community-living individuals, whose families most likely feel overburdened by worsening dementia symptoms, than in institutionalized dementia patients, whose disease progression is witnessed by professional nursing staff with a larger personal distance.

He may feel more obliged to use it if you gush over the fragrance when you hand it to him.

In such circumstances, nurses may feel more obliged to follow "display rules" while also facing more social pressure in Chinese social contexts.

Similar(55)

Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany told Mr. Obama that she felt more obliged to run for another term because of Mr. Trump's election to defend the liberal international order.

28 31 The explanation could also be that the participants in the screen group felt more obliged to participate in follow-up assessments, whereas participants in the control group felt less obliged to do so.

Second, while German policy-makers were among those with the most negative rating of resources in the entire survey (together with those from Italy and Norway), they also felt more obliged to become active than policy-makers in any other country except Finland.

Partners tend to be more sensitive to the patient's desire to live at home as long as possible and to feel more responsible (or obliged) to provide the care the patient needs, leading to a longer perseverance time, many times at the expense of their own health [ 38, 39].

Katrina, an accountant, says it has been hard to get used to using someone else's things after time in her own home, and that she feels much more obliged to wash up quickly and be tidy.

Since the demonstrations of will that were crucial to the policy-were not forthcoming from the country, he apparently felt all the more obliged to make it clear to the world that his own will, at least, was firm.

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