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51 Sentences With "gnaws at"

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

Cormier's one professional loss gnaws at him like a sickness.
It was not just the losing; that gnaws at every coach.
The lack of answers in her son's death gnaws at Ms. Rhodes.
Unlike him, she does not face deportation, a prospect that gnaws at him.
This gnaws at the scientific body politic, and saps resources, both financial and moral.
Now, it seems like a fear of losing gnaws at them the whole game.
Every moment that isn't marked with immediate danger gnaws at you with unseen terror.
On the high plains a rig gnaws at rock more than 3,000 feet (10.53km) underground.
At first, water gnaws at the ice shelf from below, causing it to weaken and thin.
But, during this government shutdown of almost a month, another feeling gnaws at my guts. Anger.
Then there is the hardest question, the one that gnaws at the souls of even Trump's protectors.
There is another question that gnaws at her as well: When a crime is committed, someone is supposed to pay.
An ever depreciating totem that gnaws at my subconscious and introduces a low-level sense of dread into my days.
In places like these, a quiet fear gnaws at households: What happens when the money runs out around the 21th?
And this gnaws at the president and it perhaps explains why he let those wounds get the better of him today.
Yet, the fact his team has not won a championship gnaws at him, causing him to lose sleep after unsatisfactory performances.
Nofar's guilt gnaws at her even as she is hailed as an avatar of feminist empowerment; the singer is disgraced and imprisoned.
You're concerned about the germs your friend might be ingesting, and the fact that she routinely gnaws at her fingertips until they bleed.
Finck writes beautifully of this struggle but is suddenly beset with self-doubt that gnaws at her in the form of literal rats.
The erosion of the land, along with the unpredictability of the seasons and intensified cyclones, islanders said, also gnaws at their mental health.
In modern times, as cancel culture gnaws at our better instincts, it's become a slippery, unstable pedestal on which to consider celebrities like James.
I know it's not perfect in the way that something like "Pride and Prejudice" is, but it gnaws at me even more because of that.
But the nagging fear of an eventual American withdrawal, perhaps as part of a power-sharing agreement with China in Asia, still gnaws at South Korea.
DJ: When there are so many polarizing perspectives and anger, what gnaws at my gut is the lack of leadership that wants to bring everybody together and listen.
A lynx watches pensively from the shore; a raccoon gnaws at some unseen feast; and a moose wades into the reeds, the water rippling around its huge form.
What gnaws at Mitchell is the fact that things didn't have to end up this way; a different kind of future could have been possible for 1906 Boone.
What gnaws at me every time I eat a Luger porterhouse is the realization that it's just another steak, and far from the best New York has to offer.
But one of the things that gnaws at me is that Trump doesn't seem interested in spreading his message in neighborhoods with people that look like me or other minority communities.
This is even more true if envy gnaws at your bowels at the sight of all those hardbodies (to use one of the script's favorite words) prancing and posing before you.
"What gnaws at me every time I eat a Luger porterhouse is the realization that it's just another steak, and far from the best New York has to offer," he added.
Ginny's monomaniacal drive to rescue this (possibly invented) sibling gnaws at her adoptive parents, who are expecting a baby themselves and have reached wit's end trying to contain their daughter's loose-cannon impulses.
As automation gnaws at the economy, Fortune 500 companies have come out with training programs to prepare their workers for a future in which their jobs change significantly — or cease to exist at all.
Guest star Cicely Tyson's appearances are few and far between, but a little dose hits hard as she gnaws at her daughter to be a more noble-minded control freak: family-focused, God-fearing, ultimately good.
EDINBURGH (Reuters) - As Brexit gnaws at Britain's political structure, supporters of an independent Scotland are launching a new grassroots campaign aimed at convincing a large majority of Scots to back a split from the United Kingdom.
Mr Kim is also counting on the fact that the younger, third generation of chaebol bosses "sees change as inevitable", as Chinese competition gnaws at profits and as investors demand a bigger slice of what is left.
Retailers in Africa's most advanced economy have nearly all complained of tough trading conditions as consumer sentiment plumbs multi-year lows and high unemployment and inflation gnaws at disposable income in the nation's first recession in eight years.
In Book One, it is "the ambition to write something exceptional one day" that gnaws at him, that turns time into a nemesis, and that makes his life at home, filled with distracting chores and obligations, an existential threat.
The question gnaws at a pair of memoirs published this month: "Big Pig, Little Pig", Jacqueline Yallop's account of raising two porkers in rural France, and "As Kingfishers Catch Fire", a meditation by Alex Preston on a lifelong obsession with birds.
When a President is allowed to violate the law with impunity, and when a foreign power is allowed to interfere in our elections, it gnaws at the roots of the great oak that is our democracy, and could very well topple it.
This question gnaws at the heart of Valhalla Club because the three primary subjects found no relief in the solutions provided by the department of Veterans Affairs psychiatrists and a government which seems hellbent on ignoring what is, by any metric, a crisis.
Her unraveling of the brutal double murder is as skilled as her exploration of Pocahontas County, where the men, as much as the women, appear trapped in their predestined societal roles, and where toxic masculinity gnaws at the men, rudderless and lost, who drink to fill the idle hours.
The pain of the perception of a new psychological disprivilege within an old privilege gnaws at contemporary white people.
The family at last camps in the shadow of Camelot. The homecoming is at once difficult and joyous. Lin's secret gnaws at her mind constantly. The children are excited and curious, having heard countless tales of Camelot from their uncle, DAFYDD.
Bartley Alexander is a construction engineer and world-renowned builder of bridges undergoing a mid-life crisis. Although married to Winifred, Bartley resumes his acquaintance with a former lover, Hilda Burgoyne, in London. The affair gnaws at Bartley's sense of propriety and honor.
To everyone's surprise, Jiaojiao and Chunqiu grow closer. The jealousy bug gnaws at Vanessa who feels that she is losing her place in the family. When checking the company accounts, Jiaojiao discovers that Vanessa has been using company funds for her personal use. Vanessa is furious, and makes up her mind to take revenge on Chunqiu, Meimei, Jiaojiao and Yingying.
", Sheikh responded: "I think so." When asked what the Israeli-Palestinian conflict has to do with these problems, and whether it is a matter of feelings of self- esteem, he replied, "Exactly. It’s because we always lose to Israel. It gnaws at the people in the Middle East that such a small country as Israel, with only about 7 million inhabitants, can defeat the Arab nation with its 350 million.
Níðhǫggr gnaws the roots of Yggdrasill in this illustration from a 17th- century Icelandic manuscript. In Norse mythology, Níðhöggr (Malice Striker, traditionally also spelled Níðhǫggr, often anglicized NidhoggWhile the suffix of the name, -höggr, clearly means "striker" the prefix is not as clear. In particular, the length of the first vowel is not determined in the original sources. Some scholars prefer the reading Niðhöggr (Striker in the Dark).) is a dragon/serpent who gnaws at a root of the world tree, Yggdrasil.
Grímnismál claims that the deities meet beneath Yggdrasil daily to pass judgement. It also claims that a serpent gnaws at its roots while a deer grazes from its higher branches; a squirrel runs between the two animals, exchanging messages. Grímnismál also claims that Yggdrasil has three roots; under one resides the goddess Hel, under another the frost-giants, and under the third humanity. Snorri also relates that Hel and the frost-giants live under two of the roots but places the gods, rather than humanity, under the third root.
Saint John managed to trick him and restore the Sun, but afterwards, while chasing him, Dukljan grabbed at him and tore a piece of flesh from John's foot, which explains why humans have arches of the foot. Several variants of a story that he is still alive exist; according to them he is chained in the Morača river near Duklja (the Vizier's bridge). In some of them, he constantly gnaws at his chains, and each year around Christmas (or around Đurđevdan) nearly manages to break free and destroy the world, when four Gypsy blacksmiths reforge the chains.
Set in the small village of Maaskantje in North Brabant, a group of friends: Gerrie, Richard, Rikkert, Robbie and Barrie lose their jobs. The group perceives themselves as being victims of the widely reported credit crisis, although in actuality their misfortune is the direct result of their idleness, lack of common sense, and poor punctuality. Gerrie, for instance, turns up to work late and drives the forks of his fork-lift truck into a pallet of boxed plasma screen televisions. Similarly Richard brings his old bulldog to work with him, who in turn gnaws at and breaks the shovels of Richard's supervisor, and Rikkert is sacked by his boss, a sarcastic and abusive garage owner.
Failure or unwillingness of people to suppress their excessive ambition, selfishness and lust for power "generates divisions, parties, hatred and evil, which in essence were a result of those destructive passions". The democratic governments "gnaws at its own entrails dividing into various parties, which in various troubled times are tossed like a ship on a stormy sea, often escaping being sunk by the skill of the pilot, but even more often perishing, sometimes even right at the dock". Rejecting autocracy as a form of government, Scherbatov wrote "yet there is torture, in which there are no other laws and regulations except for the insane self-will of the despot". The Russian views on legislation were a result of the practical work of Shcherbatov in various public institutions.

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