misgiving
IPA: mɪsgˈɪvɪŋ
noun
- doubt, apprehension, a feeling of dread
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Examples of "misgiving" in Sentences
- He exudes brisk, straightforward confidence, without pretense or misgiving.
- The latter hesitated in the midst of the cut and looked around with querulous misgiving at the faces of the others.
- This was quite intolerable; a misgiving was a warning voice from God, which should be attended to as a man valued his soul.
- I looked with misgiving toward the south-west and thought of the six hundred miles of hardship before us — ay, if it were no worse than hardship.
- I read with some kind of misgiving a statement at the CRTC hearing which says "lack of determination, vigour and purpose in addressing the objectives of Parliament".
- a misgiving which is strengthened by reflecting on all those to him incomprehensible inferences to which the admission of the argument leads him, and which seem almost to involve contradictions.
- But, if we take the story in the Acts of the Apostles, there is not the smallest foothold for the fashionable notion, which is entirely due to men's dislike of the supernatural, that there was any kind of misgiving in the young Pharisee, springing from the influence of
- The impressions his mind had received while passing the churchyard, now returned upon him with added gloom; a kind of misgiving came over him; and a thousand boding thoughts haunted him like spirits, and hanging, as it were, on his heart, dragged it down farther and farther at every step.
- At the bottom of all the agitation a wedding sets going in us all there is lying, I think a kind of misgiving, a secret pity for the fate of the poor rose which is picked now and must forthwith wither; and our boisterous jollification is but an awkward barely successful effort at concealing it.
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