feel+of
61feel up to — idi+inf to feel able to, esp. to feel strong or healthy enough to …
62feel — [OE] Like its West Germanic cousins, German fühlen and Dutch voelen, feel is part of a wider Indo European word family covering notions like ‘touching’ and ‘handling’, including Greek palámē and Latin palma ‘palm of the hand’ and Latin palpāre,… …
63feel — See: GET THE FEEL OF and HARD FEELING …
64feel — or[look small] {v. phr.} To have the impression that one is insignificant, foolish, or humiliated. * / I feel small next to Hemingway, the young student of creative writing said./ …
65feel — See: GET THE FEEL OF and HARD FEELING …
66feel — or[look small] {v. phr.} To have the impression that one is insignificant, foolish, or humiliated. * / I feel small next to Hemingway, the young student of creative writing said./ …
67feel up — verb To grope someone in a sexual manner. “Feel me up and rub your pussy against mine, thatll make the pain in my bummy go away, it will,” she told me. I felt sorry for her. And I guess thats why I let her show me how girls made out without boys …
68feel — v To understand. You know me but do you feel me? 1990s …
69feel — See: get the feel of and hard feeling …
70feel — n a sexual contact, a grope or caress. In American teen jargon the word is often heard in the phrase cop a feel …