Sentence examples for to felt from inspiring English sources

Dictionary

to felt

verb

To make into felt, or a feltlike substance; to cause to adhere and mat together.

Exact(57)

"They are getting closer and closer to felt," he said.

The London we've been used to felt old, distant and no longer fit for purpose.

Desmond Jaddoo, a community activist, said those he had spoken to felt "very much betrayed".

One architect I spoke to felt that Eliasson's water and Transsolar's cloud were simply one-liners.

Some of the experts you spoke to felt that we had, in effect, declared victory in Afghanistan prematurely.

But everyone he spoke to felt so-s-, too, and things more or less balanced up at the office.

He realized that, even if the people he spoke to felt nothing for him, he still wanted something from them.

Where Darwin saw only chance, Butler saw the effort on the part of creatures to respond to felt needs.

Consequently, the impact (be this good or bad) is likely to felt most keenly in these areas.

None of the German-born children of migrants I spoke to felt they would ever be fully accepted as German.

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Similar(1)

Pianoforte, the variation of sound from quiet to loud, is set in motion almost instantaneously as steel strings tautly attached to felt-covered hammers feel the vibration.

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