Sentences with phrase «dread of someone»

Subject - specific differences in dread of capture and confidence of escape.
This stage of that life - death cycle can last weeks, months or years and is the most dreaded of human experiences.
This natural dread of death, therefore, has not disappeared.
If it's the fear and dread of dirty dishes, it's time to pull out your secret weapon — a trusty cast - iron skillet.
This movie represents forces in his life pushing him in that direction, but a real dread of that conviction.
I can only say that I live in dread of these prospects.
Diaper changing is probably the most dreaded of all baby care activities.
I know for a fact staff members of the AGs office are filled with dread of the prospects of his winning.
Its a fascinating picture with a phenomenal sense of dread of what awaits the unsuspecting royals.
This film rivets you to your seat as stupendous action sequences alternate with intrigue and suspense as the plot cascades to Europe, Asia - even the Vatican - under the relentless threat of the dreaded
Lord, strengthen all who labor that we may find release from fear of rattling saber, from dread of war's increase; when hope and courage falter, your still small voice be heard; with faith that none can alter, your servants undergird.
That and my failing health, advanced age, poor eyesight, lackluster prospects and creeping dread of imminent death.
Years working as a sys admin in college in the Windows 95 an XP days left him with a lingering dread of anything from Redmond.
Their pagan dread of mortality issues in an equally pagan desire for earthly life to continue beyond death.
Imagine that a student enters an English class to find that it's that most dreaded of days — graded paper pass - back day.
A classic story that engages our emotions at the most primal level, The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon explores our deep dread of the unknown and the extent to which faith can conquer it.
The crucifying of the affections and lusts includes the overcoming of our natural dread of suffering and the perfection of our detachment from the world.
«Superstitious dread of the corpse of a person» who died of smallpox was common among Pulaya Christians and missionaries found it difficult to secure a «Christian burial» for victims of smallpox.
Her themes include hot - button issues like gender, race, economic inequality and guns, as well as timeless subjects like dread of the future, our relationship to technology and the comic - torturous life of the artist.
The ACC markedly increases in activity with increased dread of pain (9) and supports our findings of a positive correlation between dread ratings and rACC activity when the AI was proximal (table S4).
Ably assisted by Marillier - and Ella Rumpf as Justine's controlling sis - Ducournau captures the more quotidian dread of fitting into cliques, losing your virginity and living up to family expectations.
Ably assisted by Marillier — and Ella Rumpf as Justine's controlling sis — Ducournau captures the more quotidian dread of fitting into cliques, losing your virginity and living up to family expectations.
Frozen under a wicked enchantment from the White Witch (Tilda Swinton), the inhabitants live either in mortal dread of the self - appointed Queen, or as faithful servants to her evil desires.
For starters, the winners are all announced in advance, so the talent breeze in with good attitudes, not roiling with the existential dread of perhaps smiling as someone else grabs their prize.
There's a similarly methodical quality to the mounting dread of Take Shelter that sometimes makes the movie drag, but its familial and, especially, economic anxieties are so clear that some workmanlike withholding doesn't take away from its power.
Or «to believe in the cross of Christ... means to make the cross... our own, to undergo crucifixion with him... the cross becomes the judgment of ourselves... crucifying the affections and lusts... overcoming our natural dread of suffering... and the perfection of our detachment from the world... the judgment... and deliverance of man.»
Dread of capture correlated with enhanced activity in the PAG (11, — 32, — 18; Z = 3.14), but peaking in the vicinity of the dorsal raphe nuclei (DRN; — 1, — 26, — 19; Z = 4.65), for the AI condition.
The loss of place is the great dread of Sheol, Purgatory, and Hell.
Like Kierkegaard's restless dread of the Christian life, Foreman continues to ask life questions through song.
It was the soul of his entire race that had shuddered within him: an obscure memory of a first sudden awakening in the midst of beasts stronger, better - armed than he; a sad echo of the long struggle to tame the corn and to master the fire; a rancorous dread of the maleficent forces of nature, a lust for knowledge and possession... A moment ago, in the sweetness of the first contact, he had instinctively longed to lose himself in the warm wind which enfolded him.
Of course every day brings more junk mail — advertisements for church furniture, stained glass repair, conferences at Willow Creek I don't even bother to open some of it, and live in dread of tossing out something important.
All immediacy, in spite of its illusory peace and tranquillity, is dread, and hence, quite consistently, it is dread of nothing; one can not make immediacy so anxious by the most horrifying description of the most dreadful something, as by a crafty, apparently casual half word about an unknown peril which is thrown out with the surely calculated aim of reflection; yea, one can put immediacy most in dread by slyly imputing to it knowledge of the matter referred to.
It is not the routine, humdrum marking of time in our daily lives, or the terror and dread of devastation.
By such examples, by instances of the perpetrators of such acts going unpunished, the lawless in spirit are encouraged to become lawless in practice; and having been accustomed to no restraint but dread of punishment, they thus become absolutely unrestrained.
Now why do we find this widespread panic, this unconscious dread of genuine democracy, among those who claim to be its guardians?
I know that English departments in universities, customarily without knowing what they're doing, teach dread of the engineering department, the physics department and the chemistry department.
On first reading, the story is devastating to Eli, and he takes it with the calm resignation of an elderly outlaw whose life has become the ritual dread of waiting to be caught.
On the contrary, it is a time of great mourning, of utter dread of what could become of us, and a time of extreme sobriety as we contemplate the task at hand: to forge our own values.
Many who would like to believe in eternal life have a rankling suspicion that it is a bit of wishful thinking intended to ease our loneliness and dread of dying.
One hundred and eighty years ago, at a time civilized Europeans were still possessed by a medieval dread of water, Captain Cook in his journal marveled at the bold, swimming Polynesians.
Is anybody else getting the intense dread of another potential Arsenal February melt down?
Am I alone in the absolute dread of the messes, accidents, extra laundry, clean - ups all while rangling a crawler soon to be walker and crazy pets, stairs and a room with a capacity of 1???
However, some women suffer from what is called tocophobia, which is an intense fear or dread of childbirth.
The common denominator is some kind of negative emotion, but the culture and time will determine which negative emotion is commonly provoked, whether it's disgust at bodily secretions, or dread of deities, or repugnance at sexual perversions.
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