want sense | 0.72 | I want your sense of the time. | |||
achieve sense | 0.66 | Mapplethorpe was much more able to achieve a sense of balance in his art. | |||
knock sense | 0.66 | Maybe getting arrested will knock some sense into him. | |||
overcome sense | 0.66 | He also had to overcome a sense that he was on a quixotic mission. | |||
alter sense | 0.59 | Tanzania also altered my sense of time. | |||
diminish sense | 0.59 | Losing in the first round did not diminish her sense of accomplishment. | |||
enhance sense | 0.59 | They will enhance your sense of personal safety. | |||
impart sense | 0.59 | Her presence imparted a sense of importance to the meeting. | |||
inspire sense | 0.59 | It has yet to inspire a sense of viewer loyalty or water-cooler buzz. | |||
recapture sense | 0.59 | The Miramar is seeking to recapture a sense of its more distant past. | |||
abandon sense | 0.53 | Have you abandoned your senses? | |||
communicate sense | 0.53 | In person, Glaser communicates a sense of steady vitality and perpetual, low-grade amusement. | |||
demonstrate sense | 0.53 | Baseball does demonstrate bizarre sense of humor. | |||
destroy sense | 0.53 | But we are not going to let them destroy our sense of community. | |||
erode sense | 0.53 | They certainly eroded my sense of well-being. | |||
intensify sense | 0.53 | McCarthyism intensified the sense of unease. | |||
possess sense | 0.53 | They do possess a sense of humor, and irony. | |||
undermine sense | 0.53 | Nothing is done more to undermine our sense of common responsibility than our failed welfare system. | |||
affect sense | 0.46 | The illness affected her sense of taste. | |||
excite sense | 0.46 | The process excites his senses. |