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Answer for the clue "Pool surface ", 4 letters:
felt

Alternative clues for the word felt

Word definitions for felt in dictionaries

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Felt is a 2011 album by German composer Nils Frahm . It was released on 7th October 2011 on Erased Tapes records. The name of the record refers to Nils placing felt on the strings of his piano, initially to dampen the sound to enable nighttime playing and ...

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
v. undergo an emotional sensation; "She felt resentful"; "He felt regret" [syn: experience ] come to believe on the basis of emotion, intuitions, or indefinite grounds; "I feel that he doesn't like me"; "I find him to be obnoxious"; "I found the movie rather ...

Usage examples of felt.

For the first time he looked at her, and she felt a little shiver run down between her breasts.

August 1998 As she drove away from Manchester University, Catherine felt the hot buzz that burned in her veins whenever she knew she was on the verge of a major story.

Bremer was so concerned by the tone of the aardwolf that he felt compelled to write an accompanying note at the end of the report, in which he downplayed its analysis of the worsening conditions in Iraq.

She felt more than one pang of conscience as she agreed that Wickham was, indeed, abovestairs at that very moment, and, was moreover, slightly wounded from an accidentally self-inflicted gunshot.

Even with that, though, Abram Schuster felt rather secure having survived two presidents.

But our Acca felt Bryan might be a target, so we put someone here undercover.

When the stories arrived of curses laid on the Achaian kings, Penelope felt no surprise.

Although he was the number four Myrmidon officer on Acorus, when he studied all the reports, he felt more like a glorified lander clerk.

George thrust his hand into the actuator hole, felt the metal plate and stepped forward into weightlessness.

They lad read the same law, distinguished themselves at an early age in the same profession, though Jefferson had never relished the practice of law as Adams had, nor felt the financial need to keep at it.

More than that he felt he could not tell her, and for three days, July 30, 31, and August 1, Adams was engaged in passionate debate over the first of these problems.

Free of the city, out of doors and riding again, Adams felt a wave of relief from his cares and woes, even to the point of finding Edward Rutledge an acceptable companion.

Lee may have been justified in some of his anger at Franklin, Adams felt, but Lee was badly cast in his role, a dreadful aggravation to Franklin and also to the French, who not only disliked him but distrusted him, which was more serious.

But Adams thought highly of Dana, the boy excelled at French, and the experience, Adams felt, would stand him well for the future.

More than a month would pass before Adams felt reasonably well again, and some symptoms of the fever would drag on, or recur long afterward, another characteristic of malaria.