Dread
in sentence
308 examples of Dread in a sentence
During the last days of World War II, as the soviets' bombs explode closer and closer as the days go by, the routine of concentration camp Awschwitz follows its course and represents the focus of this picture: the atmosphere of
dread
and death inhabiting the heavy air, the work inside the crematorium, the random executions of men, women and children,and the drama of the Jewish sonderkommando, a group formed by prisoners who, in exchange of better food and clothes, helped their tormentors in the systematic of death inside the camps, guiding the new arrived prisoners through the corridors that lead to the gas chambers, and the disposal of the bodies after wards, just to be killed some time latter.
You actually fell you're inside the corridors of the crematorium, it's like you're trapped inside these tiny, claustrophobic gas chambers, it's like the putrid smell of the dead, yellow corpses piled up on the floor and the
dread
gets under your skin and stays there for days.Tim Blake Nelson was at the helm of The Grey Zone, and what a masterful filmmaker Mr. Nelson is...The sense of
dread
and dark tonalities of The Grey Zone put David Cronenberg to the shame.
So, apart from that
dread
feeling when you realise within 90 seconds that your money has been wasted, and that do I or don't I walk out of the cinema, what has the film got to offer?
This film is extremely well-done and conveys a sense of suspense (maybe a better word is dread) better than most movies could ever dream of.
Chill Factor" provides plenty of bleak snowbound atmosphere of
dread
and severe isolation.The acting by two leads is excellent and the final moment is utterly chilling.A perfect example of brilliant TV-horror that perfectly conveys the fear of unseen.8
You like him from the very first scene and you follow his adventures with excitement and
dread.
But for any of this to happen, May needs to use the fear of a leadership battle within the Conservative Party, and the party’s
dread
of anther general election, to get ahead of the coming challenges.
Far from engaging in Holmes’s free trade in ideas, Krugman has been the intellectual equivalent of a robber baron, exploiting his power to the point of driving decent people away from the public sphere – particularly younger scholars, who understandably
dread
a “takedown” by the “Invincible Krugtron.”
Hundreds of tent clusters have come up, but thousands of families remain out under the skies, facing rain and hail, and with
dread
in their hearts.
These feelings include guilt, shame, outrage, empathy, sympathy, dread, disgust, and a whole cocktail of other sentiments.
Bush’s foreign-policy paradigm of an alliance of “moderates” to defeat the “extremists” – a model too enthusiastically seconded by an unimaginative Israeli leadership and by those Arabs (led by Egypt and Saudi Arabia) who
dread
the forces of radical change – has collapsed.
There is no place on Earth that is immune from the
dread
of a cancer diagnosis; wherever the news is delivered, it is often devastating to recipients and their families.
Tudjman, long an object of dread, has vanished from the political screen, taking into oblivion the ideological clutter that made Croatia a pariah state.
Vaccines for all three of these
dread
diseases are within scientific reach, but will requires some billions of dollars to bring through the research and development stages to actual use.
By 2000, European senior bureaucrats began to
dread
the approach of each international meeting as the likely occasion for yet another lecture by the Americans on how Europe needed to become much more like America right now.
It ended in
dread
and mourning.
The region’s other major actors – the US, Japan, and even North Korea – look upon this blossoming friendship with considerable
dread.
Ultimately, the spiritual gloom and existential
dread
that we have come to associate with Eastern Europe are merely an extension of our own.
Most African wives
dread
the season.
But by January, my holiday cheer is usually replaced with
dread
because the tensions fueling Bush’s rhetoric – and the reasons he dismissed Bill Clinton’s preferred label of “partner” – have never adequately been addressed.
Educating Lebanon’s Syrian RefugeesNEW YORK – On a recent visit to Beirut, I met a girl and a boy who struggled through a year filled with
dread.
But that fear does not compare to their
dread
of what might happen if they rock the boat.
Other minorities in Syria, such as Christians, Druze, and Kurds, have reason to
dread
a change for the worse.
The Unbearable Lightness of BMIKIEL – Now is the time of year when many people most
dread
stepping onto the bathroom scale.
But the new strategic doctrine of “preemption,” which many argued would define war-making in the twenty-first century, suggests that democracies also fight in
dread.
Fear of terrorism is only one segment of what might best be described as a multi-level structure of
dread.
And now that our phones talk to us (Apple launched Siri, the artificial voice that answers your spoken questions, on its iPhones in 2010), they fuel
dread
that they can replace us, just as earlier waves of automation rendered much human capital obsolete.
The Chinese people, unsurprisingly, regard politics with a mixture of caution and
dread.
The arrest of 21 British Muslims for conspiring to blow up airlines crossing the Atlantic underscored, once again, the growing sense of
dread
and inevitability that is rooted in the homegrown nature of the threat.
But today's other EU members view the prospect of an ever-expanding Union to include Ukraine with fatalism and dread, for several reasons.
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