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Catalan
patetisme
A state of deeply felt distress or sorrow.
poignancy
Catalan
patetisme
1
He gave a new dimension to the Collector, a sort of
poignance
.
2
The
poignance
of the story is that these people are not empty.
3
Danger was no more than added
poignance
;
he was Puppetman, and in control.
4
I think it was the
poignance
of it.
5
Now that question has even more
poignance
.
6
He knew the
poignance
of disturbing memories.
7
And now his arms ached for her again with a
poignance
which made all other things insignificant.
8
There is a particular
poignance
in looking back now on those happy days two years before the war.
9
I'm willing to accept on faith the universal
poignance
of the ship captain's remarks upon return: It looks like Earth.
10
This year, there will be a special
poignance
to the performance of the famous carol cycle in Kilmore, Co Wexford.
11
Percival smiled as he resumed his walk-smiledwith all that bitter cynicism which only youth may feel to its full
poignance
.
12
Countless other suns, like her great-aunt's, had risen and fallen as a matter of course, each with its own forgotten story, its own
poignance
.
13
For me personally there is an added
poignance
in the fact because I am in California not Ireland, at Stanford and not in Dublin.
14
"Universal street-penny
poignance
is what gives Tyler's fiction its emotional weight as well as its sheen."
15
He gave a new dimension to the Collector, a sort of
poignance
.
16
The
poignance
of the story is that these people are not empty.
poignance
add poignance
full poignance
know the poignance
more poignance
own poignance
Catalan
patetisme