Similar words: come to terms with, come to the point, thermometer, terms, in terms, come to, in terms of, hometown.
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1. He couldn't come to terms with his sexuality.
2. Do you think the Arab countries will come to terms with Israel one day?
3. Counselling helped her come to terms with her grief.
4. He can come to terms with being poor.
5. The enemy was eventually forced to come to terms.
6. It was hard to come to terms with her death after all the support she gave to me and the family.
7. This is to help her to come to terms with her early upbringing and make sense of past experiences.
8. It has taken him a long time to come to terms with his disability.
9. George and Elizabeth have come to terms with the fact that they will never have children.
10. Germany has shown real determination to come to terms with the anti-Semitism of its past.
11. He is struggling to come to terms with his dwindling authority.
12. Margery's grieving family battled to come to terms with their loss.
13. She had come to terms with the fact that her husband would always be crippled.
14. I had to come to terms with that.
15. Could she come to terms with the knowledge that they had been conceived in that dreadful place?
16. Some of us never quite come to terms with the fact that penises come in all shapes and sizes.
17. Refusing to come to terms with reality harms us and, incidentally[sentencedict.com], deceives no one else for long.
18. To understand quantum mechanics, we must come to terms with complex-number weightings.
19. They've been trying to come to terms with what's happened ever since.
20. The 50-year-old actress is struggling to come to terms with a series of disasters that have brought her life crashing round her.
21. It helps the young reader to come to terms with his or her own non-rational, unconscious-dominated behaviour.
22. Jayojit observes his parents' old-fashioned marriage; they come to terms with his modern divorce.
23. Importantly, they may in fact be helping you come to terms with the traumatic experience.
24. The party had not yet come to terms with the departure of Mrs Thatcher and was suffering an identity crisis.
25. Female speaker There's no way you can come to terms with it.
26. Only by finding each other again can they hope to come to terms with their tragedy.sentencedict.com
27. He sat at the window, staring out into the night trying to come to terms with the anger that overwhelmed him.
28. In the commercial world, this is where architects have to come to terms with their own shortcomings.
29. To understand the nature of this challenge, we must first come to terms with the concept of a physical field.
30. Four died in hospital and Emma Hartley, one of the survivors, was trying to come to terms with that.
More similar words: come to terms with, come to the point, thermometer, terms, in terms, come to, in terms of, hometown, come together, come to mind, come to life, come to pass, terms of trade, come to light, come to an end, come to grief, come to blows, come to a head, come to naught, interferometer, come to grips with, come to an agreement, odometer, coterminous, from time to time, kilometer, nanometer, barometer, manometer, hygrometer.