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Synonyms for feels out
| Grammar : Verb | 
| Spell : feel | 
| Phonetic Transcription : fil | 
Top 10 synonyms for feels out Other synonyms for the word feels out
- accost
 - analyze
 - appeal to
 - apply to
 - arouse
 - ask
 - be all ears
 - beseech
 - bug
 - carry
 - case
 - catechize
 - check
 - check out
 - check over
 - check up
 - confer
 - consult
 - delve
 - dig
 - entreat
 - explore
 - eye
 - eyeball
 - feel around
 - feel one out
 - feel out
 - frisk
 - get through to
 - get to
 - give a play
 - give a tumble
 - give the once over
 - go into
 - go over
 - greet
 - grill
 - hit
 - hit up
 - implore
 - impress
 - influence
 - inquire
 - inquisite
 - inspect
 - inspire
 - interrogate
 - investigate
 - knock
 - listen in
 - look into
 - look over
 - look-see
 - make advance
 - make an impression
 - make inquiry
 - make overture
 - make up to
 - mark
 - melt
 - move
 - muckrake
 - nose around
 - penetrate
 - pierce
 - plead
 - poke
 - probe
 - prod
 - propose
 - prospect
 - pry
 - put out a feeler
 - put to the test
 - query
 - question
 - quicken
 - quiz
 - read
 - reconnoiter
 - request information
 - research
 - review
 - roast
 - run down
 - scout
 - scrutinize
 - search
 - seek
 - seek information
 - sift
 - soften
 - sound
 - sound out
 - speak to
 - spy
 - stake out
 - stimulate
 - stir
 - strike
 - strike a chord
 - stroke
 - study
 - supplicate
 - sway
 - take aside
 - talk to
 - tap
 - test
 - test the waters
 - thumb
 - tug at the heart
 - tumble
 - upset
 - verify
 - wiretap
 
Définition of feels out
Origin :- Old English felan "to touch, perceive," from Proto-Germanic *foljan (cf. Old Saxon gifolian, Old Frisian fela, Dutch voelen, Old High German vuolen, German fühlen "to feel," Old Norse falma "to grope"), from PIE root *pal- "to touch, feel, shake, strike softly" (cf. Greek psallein "to pluck (the harp)," Latin palpare "to touch softly, stroke," palpitare "to move quickly"), perhaps ultimately imitative.
 - The sense in Old English was "to perceive through senses which are not referred to any special organ." Sense of "be conscious of a sensation or emotion" developed by late 13c.; that of "to have sympathy or compassion" is from c.1600. To feel like "want to" attested from 1829.
 
- As in approach : verb make request, suggestion
 - As in inquire : verb ask; look into
 - As in investigate : verb check into thoroughly
 - As in probe : verb explore, investigate
 - As in touch : verb have an effect on
 
- But it's mostly when she hasn't had a drink and feels out of sorts.
 - Extract from : « Fifty Contemporary One-Act Plays » by Various
 
- Mother, I wish you knew how near to God one feels out in the desert with the stars.
 - Extract from : « The Man of the Desert » by Grace Livingston Hill
 
- It is a bad sign when one feels out of harmony with one's best influences.
 - Extract from : « The Catholic World, Vol. X, October 1869 » by Various
 
- It's just the sort of place he would select for a visit, because, being a London fellow, he feels out of it in too small a town.
 - Extract from : « The Vanity Girl » by Compton Mackenzie
 
- I learned it because I think it expresses the way one feels out here.
 - Extract from : « Virginia of Elk Creek Valley » by Mary Ellen Chase
 
- When one feels out of spirits, it's the most natural thing possible to be extravagantly gay; now, isn't it?
 - Extract from : « The Letters of Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Volume II » by Elizabeth Barrett Browning
 
- She feels out of sorts altogether and hopes nothing is going to happen.
 - Extract from : « Idle Thoughts of an Idle Fellow » by Jerome K. Jerome
 
Antonyms for feels out
Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019
 