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18 Sentences With "agonise"

How to use agonise in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "agonise" and check conjugation/comparative form for "agonise". Mastering all the usages of "agonise" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Parents agonise about getting their children into the right schools and universities.
It will also agonise whether its enthusiasm for a second referendum alienated its traditional voters.
Commentators agonise for hours over whether or not an injury holds the potential to impact an athlete's performance.
Europe will grow, but the pace will slow, and the ­European Central Bank will agonise over raising lending rates.
The party will agonise whether it has let itself become so London-based that it has lost its roots in the North.
They agonise about so-called third-party lawsuits, whereby outsiders pay for one side in a legal dispute in order to make a point.
A supermarket, in contrast, does not particularly care whose wallet it is draining, nor does the power company agonise about whether a customer is worthy of its watts.
This disdain for speech (which caused him to agonise about his own copious writings) stemmed in part from his belief that God's words were beyond the scope of "human argument".
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - While British lawmakers agonise in parliament on Saturday over whether to approve a last-minute European Union divorce deal, one interested onlooker will be watching a different television channel.
In the script's notes, Ms Kirkwood says the play is not aimed at a single generation, but in the way in which the characters agonise over their decisions, and question one another's morals and motives, it is recognisably aimed at the modern shrinking from duty and self-sacrifice.
She explores the idea that there can be peace in death. She also begins to suggest that nothing is a part of God. "Nothingness" and darkness are no longer just reasons to doubt and agonise over. "St. Thomas Didymus" and "Mass" show this growth, as they are poems that lack her former nagging wonder and worry.
Sandwiched between them, Jiahao can only agonise. Around this time, a man claiming to be their future father appears out of nowhere, making this messy family even more “exciting”. Jiahao tries his best to overcome the various obstacles. His efforts are not futile in the end. He succeeds as “head of the family”, and in “pairing up” Ah Wei and Xiaohui.
She steals some money left by the phone by Grant's flatmate Matt Wilson (Greg Benson). Matt and Steven Matheson (Adam Willits) discover Kim is a drug addict when she asks both of them if they can get hold of some drugs for her. They both agonise about telling Grant. When Kim fails to return home from a night out in Yabbie Creek, Grant is worried and when she returns Kim invents a story.
It is on this point that Charles Koechlin makes a reservation about Ravel's poems, in his ':Charles Koechlin Traité de l'orchestration, 1941, ed. Max Eschig, vol.1, (p. 147) "Avoid also words that are rare and difficult to understand at first audition". The first tercet of Surgi de la croupe et du bond: ;Le pur vase d’aucun breuvage ;Que l’inexhaustible veuvage ;Agonise mais ne consent appears to be the most difficult, from this point of view.
Until December 1990, Kofi lived outside of the area that the soap is set—remaining with his maternal grandparents in Bristol following the death of his mother. Clyde accepts this as he is unable to provide financially for his child, a fact that he is seen to agonise over, and a source of friction between him and his father Celestine. Clyde eventually brings Kofi to live with him in Walford when Abigail's parents threaten to take Kofi to live in the West Indies. Kofi is often in scenes with another child actress, Samantha Leigh Martin, who played Vicki Fowler.
Based on that, consumers are free to choose between sustainable and unsustainable products themselves. The opposite opinion is held by Tim Lang, professor of food policy at City University London and a prominent figure in Britain's food industry. In an interview with The Guardian journalist Leo Hickman, Lang argues that the consumer need not be bothered in the supermarket aisle to agonise over complex issues such as animal welfare, carbon footprints, workers' rights and excessive packaging, often without any meaningful data on the label to inform their decision-making. Lang instead suggested that the manufacturers and retailers should take more responsibility by making most of these decisions on consumer's behalf before the product even reaches the shelves.
Against orders, Mike Yates removes a fragment of the wreckage for Ian to examine later. The Magnum Bank is raided by robbers armed with AK-47s, and when DI George Boucher and his nephew and partner Rob Thorpe enter the bank without waiting for backup, Thorpe is gunned down by the escaping robbers. Boucher is left to agonise over how to tell his sister about her son's death, and only feels worse when he is taken off the case due to his personal involvement. The robbers targeted specific safety-deposit boxes owned by the criminal mastermind Victor Magister, who prefers to be known as "the Master", who orders his criminal lawyer Ross Grant to investigate and teach the perpetrators a lesson.
Exact figure: 6.045, calculated from BARB figures for week ending 18 September 2005 and all subsequent weeks until 13 November 2005 Weekly Top 30 Programmes BARB The opening two-part episode introduces two new characters to the series, Zafar Younis (Raza Jaffrey, whose character made his debut in the final episode of series three), and Juliet Shaw (Anna Chancellor). The storyline involves a terrorist bombing central London, something that, in reality, took place on 7 July, two months prior to the airing but after the filming was already complete. According to The Guardian newspaper, the day the first episode aired, "The similarities were sufficient to cause head of drama Jane Tranter and new BBC One controller Peter Fincham to agonise over whether to drop the episodes."Gibson, Owen Spooky coincidences "The Guardian", 12 September 2005 The episodes eventually aired unedited, although before both instalments of the two-parter the BBC One continuity announcer warned viewers that they featured scenes of terrorist bombing in London which some viewers might find disturbing.

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