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18 Sentences With "ruminate over"

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

We ruminate over the past and worry about the future.
Like every Green Day song before it, the track invites us to ruminate over how "the world has lost its collective mind".
Regardless, don't treat it as something to "go off and gossip about, exaggerate, or ruminate over to use as ammunition later," Kane says.
When, in my bleaker moments, I ruminate over the things that could spell the end of humanity, I usually come to roughly the same conclusions.
We often traveled together and would ruminate over how a child could fit into our lives and how much of what we loved we would have to give up.
It is a dreadful place where our most august jurists ruminate over catheter gauges and needle sizes, and ponder whether to slice deep into the groin or puncture internal jugular veins.
I started out by by giving myself a few minutes to ruminate over a puzzle before looking for a hint online, but before long, I was explicitly relying on a walkthrough to guide me along.
Rather than endlessly ruminate over your money woes — while doing nothing to address them — start thinking of ways you can dig yourself out of the hole, even if at first it's by the spoonful, rather than the shovelful.
For starters, here are just a few questions a citizen (or, dare I say, a strategist) might ask: Now, while you ruminate over those simple if thorny questions, consider a few complicating factors: None of this is, in itself, nefarious.
During the seventh season of Game of Thrones, EW's Darren Franich and Shirley Li have ventured into the weeds of Westeros every week to untangle the latest burning questions, ruminate over theories, and trace the show's remaining connections to the unfinished books.
All well and good, maybe even addictive for some, but when I fill in on this column and really get to ruminate over these grids, I solve them on paper, at my kitchen table, with talk radio on and a cup of either coffee or wine.
"For anxiety disorders and PTSD, 22 years was the average time between symptom onset and treatment, because people didn't want to talk and ruminate over the terrible things they went through," said Siobhan O'Neill, a professor at Ulster University who carried out a detailed study into mental health in Northern Ireland's history.
Eventually Asratyan began to ruminate over the possibility of being caught, and in order to prevent his victims from being able to trace his crimes, began to kill them. Asratyan committed his murders with his next victims: his first victim was killed with a knife, and the second was drowned.
Luis Forest, an aging Falangist writer, has retired to Sitges to devote himself to review his past, write his memoirs and ruminate over his failed marriage. Due to a sense of guilt for his political past, aligned with the Francoist regime, he lives in virtual isolation in a large house accompanied only by his dog and Tesla, the housekeeper. Luis's isolation is suddenly interrupted by the unexpected visit of his niece, Mariana. Young and wildly carefree, Mariana arrives with the excuse to interview her uncle about the biographical book he is writing.
Yedigei, most adamantly, makes them promise to bury him next to Kazangap since he is the oldest and the most likely to die next. Everybody leaves after the burial, but Yedigei remains with Karanar and his dog, Zholbars, to ruminate over the day's circumstances. He decides to return to the check-point in order to vocalize his anger at the guard, but a series of rockets are launched into space from within the fenced area before he reaches the check-point, sending Yedigei, Zholbars, and Karanar running off into the Sarozek.
An 1892 lithograph of a woman diagnosed with depression Major depression significantly affects a person's family and personal relationships, work or school life, sleeping and eating habits, and general health. Its impact on functioning and well-being has been compared to that of other chronic medical conditions, such as diabetes. A person having a major depressive episode usually exhibits a low mood, which pervades all aspects of life, and an inability to experience pleasure in previously enjoyable activities. Depressed people may be preoccupied with—or ruminate over—thoughts and feelings of worthlessness, inappropriate guilt or regret, helplessness or hopelessness.
Will demands that John end his tale and give the group a sense of closure by admitting it was all a hoax, and threatens to have John involuntarily committed for psychiatric evaluation should he refuse to do so. John appears to ruminate over his response before finally "confessing" to everyone that his story was a prank. John's friends leave the party with various reactions: Edith is relieved; Harry and Dan indicate an open mind; Art never wants to see John again; Will still believes John needs professional help; Sandy and Linda clearly believe John. After everyone else but Will and Sandy have left, Will overhears John and Sandy's conversation, which suggests the story could be true after all.
The short story includes the theme of memory which pervades a great deal of Crowley's work, notably Ariel Hawksquill's "magic" in Little, Big and the Pierce's quest in The Solitudes. By the end of the story, the narrator prefers involuntary memory to that which is either significantly detailed, or technologically preserved. An additional major theme relates to the human grieving process, and the tendency of a person who has experienced a great loss to repeatedly ruminate over the painful memories, and by doing so, gradually alter those memories to be less attractive, until they can no longer command the attention that they once did. In an interview, Crowley revealed that the story also parallels Greek myth dealing with those who have died, especially Orpheus and Eurydice and Aeneas' being required to give blood to hear the shades in Hades.

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