... Naomi, despite her best efforts, has always associated with the word 'love' in her own mind. She hears herself uttering those three little words far too often, Naomi thinks, and worries that somehowverbalising such a strong emotion will one day weaken it, render it completely meaningless. In some ways, this thought terrifies her so much more than the idea of losing Emily, because she knows (how ...
...back to 'with.' "Do you have the scars to prove it?" he teased, raising his hand through the other man's hold, palm out to display the moon shaped lines still visible there. His own way of verbalising his re-commitment. In a way it was childish, like a game of Taboo—both of them hinting a fact they were forbidden to speak outright. And yet, it also seemed fitting they should come back to each ...
... that ruler. He’d been raised as a Catholic but that had never stuck. He lived by his own rules, and the Ten Commandments, what were they? They were too restricting for his taste, but verbalising this had only left him worse off than he was. He’d been whipped back into shape with lengthy sessions of having the Bible read to him, or so his parents thought. He felt the same as...
... a short sigh. How pathetic that the ritual morning screw became a ‘I’m sorry I can’t say I love you’ type fuck. I hate it when I decide to say things through sex rather then just verbalising my feelings. I guess I’m just a physical person. But being a physical person means I’m touchy; I like kisses ad cuddles and I can’t talk to someone without touching them or using hand gestures; ...
...? Confident? Have you met my brother? He’s a nervous wreck who doesn’t know how to explain how he feels.” Gerard said, surprised at Frank’s description. “Well I guess he’s not great at verbalising his feelings. But he’s never nervous. He sang with me the other day, while I played guitar.” “He sang. Mikey. Shit.” Gerard sat back on the couch, eyeing Frank as he smoked. Maybe he ...
They sure are. And most of them are in here. Anyway, what does fame bring apart from 'more'? Woooooh, Waaaaah. It's like, Woooooh, you know. Now i thought that was just a comedy phrase Paul Whitehouse made up, but now I see that it's actually the verbalising of fem-teen Newcastle thought.
...I – can I have one?” Piro looks down. His hands are shaking. “Do – do you want this one?” Her eyes light up. “Really? But you’re working on it? Can – I really?” Piro nods, but cannot masterverbalising much more. It’s a real girl. He silently hands her the sketch of the sim character. The drawing may not have been anything to him (the look still wasn’t right) – but she’d gotten so much from it. It...
... just as her fingertips brushed against the mottled suede. He batted her hand away and knocked the gun from her grip, shoving her hard and making her falter. She swore internally, not wasting her breath on verbalisingthe curse as he knocked her back with a left hook in an attempt to put some distance between them and she fought to regain her balance. She did so quickly, he had gotten two steps ...
... Snape was present in the classroom during his teahcing :|. He basically alwats says "get on with it" and then hovers around, there would be ways of explaining how one can cast a spell without verbalising the incantation for the same. At least I would think so. Not dissimilar to how Muggle children are taught to read without moving their lips, for instance. Example and practice, fair enough, and ...