FIND vs FEEL: NOUN
- A discovery of something valuable; the thing found: as, a find in the gold-fields; finds of prehistoric tools. The use of find as a noun has become common only since its application in recent times to discoveries of archæological remains.
- Something that is found, especially an unexpectedly valuable discovery.
- The act of finding.
- A productive insight
- The act of discovering something
- That quality in an object by which it appeals to the sense of touch.
- A sensation of any kind, or a vague mental impression or feeling.
- The sense or a sensation of touch.
- Intuitive awareness or natural ability.
- An overall impression or effect.
- An act or instance of sexual touching or fondling.
- An act or instance of touching or feeling.
- The sense of touch.
- Perception by touch or by sensation of the skin.
- The general atmosphere of a place or situation and the effect that it has on people
- A property perceived by touch
- An intuitive awareness
- Manual-genital stimulation for sexual pleasure
FIND vs FEEL: VERB
- Get something or somebody for a specific purpose
- Receive a specified treatment (abstract)
- Get or find back; recover the use of
- Discover or determine the existence, presence, or fact of
- Make a discovery, make a new finding
- Decide on and make a declaration about
- After a calculation, investigation, experiment, survey, or study
- Make a discovery
- Accept and make use of one's personality, abilities, and situation
- Perceive or be contemporaneous with
- Succeed in reaching; arrive at
- Come to believe on the basis of emotion, intuitions, or indefinite grounds
- Come upon after searching; find the location of something that was missed or lost
- Come upon, as if by accident; meet with
- Obtain through effort or management
- Perceive oneself to be in a certain condition or place
- Examine (a body part) by palpation
- Come to believe on the basis of emotion, intuitions, or indefinite grounds
- Undergo an emotional sensation
- Pass one's hands over the sexual organs of
- Examine by touch
- Seem with respect to a given sensation given
- Have a feeling or perception about oneself in reaction to someone's behavior or attitude
- Be felt or perceived in a certain way
- Find by testing or cautious exploration
- Produce a certain impression
- Grope or feel in search of something
- Undergo passive experience of:We felt the effects of inflation undergopassiveexperienceofwefe
- Perceive by a physical sensation, e.g., coming from the skin or muscles
FIND vs FEEL: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To determine an issue of fact, and to declare such a determination to a court.
- To come to a legal decision or verdict.
- To perceive (oneself) to be in a specific place or condition.
- To bring (oneself) to an awareness of what one truly wishes to be and do in life.
- To furnish; supply.
- To obtain or acquire by effort.
- To succeed in reaching; arrive at.
- To recover the use of; regain.
- To recover (something lost).
- To experience or feel.
- To perceive to be, after experience or consideration.
- To discover or ascertain through observation, experience, or study.
- To come upon or discover by searching or making an effort.
- To come upon, often by accident; meet with.
- To have compassion or sympathy.
- To seek or explore something by the sense of touch.
- To be conscious of a specified kind or quality of physical, mental, or emotional state.
- To produce a particular impression; appear to be; seem.
- To produce a particular sensation, especially through the sense of touch.
- To experience the sensation of touch.
- To believe; think.
- To be persuaded of (something) on the basis of intuition, emotion, or other indefinite grounds.
- To be emotionally affected by.
- To be aware of; sense.
- To undergo the experience of.
- To test or explore with caution.
- To examine by touching: : touch.
- To touch.
- To perceive as a physical sensation.
- To perceive through the sense of touch.
FIND vs FEEL: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To be; to fare; -- often used in speaking of health
- To blame; to censure.
- To detect (a thief); to discover (a secret) -- to solve or unriddle (a parable or enigma); to understand.
- To arrive at, as a conclusion; to determine as true; to establish
- To provide for; to supply; to furnish
- To attain to; to arrive at; to acquire.
- To gain, as the object of desire or effort.
- To discover by study or experiment direct to an object or end.
- To discover by sounding.
- To come upon by seeking.
- To learn by experience or trial; to perceive; to experience; to discover by the intellect or the feelings; to detect; to feel.
- To meet with, or light upon, accidentally; to gain the first sight or knowledge of, as of something new, or unknown; hence, to fall in with, as a person.
- N/A
FIND vs FEEL: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Arrive at
- Succeed in reaching
- Recover the use of
- Get or find back
- Come upon after searching
- Meet with
- Come upon, as if by accident
- In law, to determine an issue after judicial inquiry; direct judgment on the merits or facts of a case: as, the jury finds for the plaintiff.
- See def. 10.
- To reach home to; take the fancy of; appeal to the taste or liking of.
- To compose; set in order; arrange.
- To support; maintain; provide for: followed by the direct object of the person (often reflexive), with in, formerly also with, before the thing provided: as, to receive ten dollars a week and find one's self.
- To supply; provide; furnish: as, to find money or provisions for an expedition.
- In law, to determine after judicial inquiry: as, the jury found him guilty; to find a verdict for the plaintiff.
- To detect; catch: commonly with out. See to find out, below.
- To come to or into by natural causes or by force of circumstances; arrive at; reach: as, water finds its level; the picture found its way to the auction-room.
- To succeed in attaining; gain by effort: as, to find leisure for a visit; to find safety in flight.
- To discover or ascertain by experience; learn from observation or sensation: as, the climate was found to be unpropitious; to find a friend in a supposed enemy.
- To discover the use of, or the way to make or use; invent; devise.
- To discover by methodical means; ascertain or make out by systematic exploration, trial, or study: as, to find bottom by sounding; to find a bullet in a wound by probing; an effort to find the philosopher's stone; to find one's way in the dark; to find the answer to a problem.
- To discover by sight or feeling; come or light upon, either by seeking or unexpectedly; encounter or meet with for the first time.
- To discover scent or game: said of dogs in the field.
- Undergo passive experience of:"We felt the effects of inflation"
- Or "it's easy when you get the feel of it";
- Undergo passive experience of
- Manual stimulation of the genital area for sexual pleasure
- Undergo an emotional sensation or be in a particular state of mind
- To have experience of; suffer under: as, to feel the vengeance of an enemy.
- Hence To make trial of in any way; test carefully or cautiously: as, to feel one's way in an undertaking; to feel the market by a small venture.
- To try by touch; examine by touching with the hands or otherwise; test by contact: as, to feel a piece of cloth; to feel the ground with the feet; a blind man feels his way with a stick.
- Reflexively, to have a sensation, feeling, perception, or impression concerning; perceive clearly to be.
- To regard with feeling or emotion; be aroused to feeling (especially disagreeable feeling) by: as, he felt his disgrace keenly.
- In general, to perceive or have a mental sense of; be conscious of; have a distinct or indistinct perception or mental impression of: as, to feel pleasure or pain; to feel the beauty of a landscape.
- To have a perception of (some external or internal condition of things) through a more or less complex mental state involving vague sensation: as, to feel the floor sinking; to feel one's mind becoming confused; to feel the approach of age.
- To perceive by the sense of smell; smell.
- To be or become aware of through material action upon any nerves of sensation other than those of sight, hearing, taste, and smell; have a sensation (other than those of the above-mentioned senses) of: as, to feel the cold; to feel a lump in the throat (through involuntary closure); to feel an inclination to cough. [The application of the word to the normal action of the higher senses is obsolete, except in the abstract meaning of perceiving by means of sensation in general: as, the higher animals feel light, heat, sound, etc. See def. 2.]
- To have a sensation or sense-perception of. Specifically
- Much; many.
- Much.
- (idiom) (feel (one's) oats) To act in a self-important manner.
- (idiom) (feel (one's) oats) To be energetic and playful.
- (idiom) (feel like (oneself)) To sense oneself as being in one's normal state of health or spirits.
- (idiom) (feel like) To have an inclination or desire for.
- (idiom) (feel in (one's) bones) To have an intuition of.
FIND vs FEEL: RELATED WORDS
- Observe, Happen, Regain, Receive, Recover, Detect, Uncovering, Feel, Retrieve, Ascertain, Determine, Obtain, Get, See, Discover
- Want, Seem, Know, Think, Tactile property, Finger, Palpate, Tone, Flavor, Spirit, Experience, Smell, Find, Look, Sense
FIND vs FEEL: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Discovery, Observe, Happen, Receive, Recover, Detect, Uncovering, Feel, Retrieve, Ascertain, Determine, Obtain, Get, See, Discover
- Believe, Want, Know, Think, Tactile property, Finger, Palpate, Tone, Flavor, Spirit, Experience, Smell, Find, Look, Sense
FIND vs FEEL: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Using this formula, we can find radius of inscribed circle which hence can be used to find area of inscribed circle.
- Helping veterans find employment with local businesses and helping local businesses find veteran workers.
- Through our various portals, students can find comprehensive information about international education, allowing them to find the education opportunities that are best for them.
- By doing this, the casting director will find a way to get you that part or find another part for you.
- Depending on where you live, you may find several other private market options available in your state or you could find none.
- Find all the gold you can, and when you find it, you better be quick!
- Autonomous car dealers will provide you can contact each dealer may find number to your visit is find out what a carfax.
- Use the Find USPS Locations tool to find the nearest Post Office offering passport services.
- With this mobile app, you can find a doctor and find a location.
- TV: to find the eyeballs wherever you can find them.
- You might not feel quite so discouraged afterward.
- In the moment, getting fired can feel earthshattering.
- When you cry I become sad, when you laugh I feel happy, when you are with me, I feel complete!
- The liberals really do feel isolated from the Abilene community, and the conservatives really do feel isolated in academia.
- If I want a character to feel real for a reader, that character must first feel real for me.
- Many people feel that the blood type diet is just a fad diet, but I feel that it truly works for me.
- And while it may feel good to look down at the scale, looking in the mirror might not feel quite as good.
- Coaching helps athletes meet these three basics: have control and freedom, feel connected, and feel competent and successful.
- US town Springfield had the power to make you feel everything there was to feel in less than half an hour.
- Contractions feel different for each woman and may feel different from one pregnancy to another.
FIND vs FEEL: QUESTIONS
- How to find the correlation coefficient with Excel?
- Where can I find the August Celestials Quartermaster?
- Where can I find information about Polycrates'life?
- How do astronomers use spectroscopy to find planets?
- How did Lacey Shillinglaw find the giant Bumblebee?
- Where can I find justicejustice Monsters Five machines?
- How do I find space station sighting opportunities?
- Where can you find contemporary sculptures in Maine?
- Where can I find accommodation near Glasgow University?
- Could you find anything to find at Strawberry Field?
- What happens when you feel unappreciated by others?
- Does Kakashi feel responsible for Itachi's actions?
- How do SLP graduate students feel about Internships?
- Do beauty treatments make you feel more attractive?
- How did Charles Dickens feel about industrialization?
- What does exertional compartment syndrome feel like?
- What do you feel when a therapist asks you what you feel?
- How do you feel when you feel detached from the world?
- Is it make you feel out of breath or makes you feel?
- Do you feel like something just doesn't feel right?