Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
I began to fret that we had left philosophy far behind.
Some fretted that he had been trying to set a fire on the plane.
But he also fretted that his emotions would get the best of him.
I enjoy not having to fret that everything is where it should be.
The last time I fretted that perhaps it made my stomach look too big.
They fret that parking, already a problem, will become impossible.
Critics may fret that matters could get out of hand.
President Bush has not played much in recent years, and he fretted that his game was "terrible."
You know you're in trouble when conservatives fret that the military is getting too much power.
Once the tax increase takes effect, though, some experts fret that the economy will cool in 2007.
Some people have fretted that it may be done in by today's lower homicide rates.
And they fretted that minorities in general did not know how to play golf.
Parents fretted that the protesters had made the town too dangerous for their children.
Like any ordinary working mother of 13, the queen fretted that she had too little time for her children.
They fret that the climate of relations could be damaged.
The island is a mess as people worry and fret that the town will never be the same again.
Nor did he fret that the move would provide little immediate stimulus to the economy.
"But you're not fretted that they might blow us up?
I soon began to fret that we might not have even one evening meal of salmon.
But they fret that their way of life is rapidly receding.
Then he fretted that the participants might turn into a hostile mob.
Some fret that their teenage children cannot find work, even with a diploma.
We used to fret that Japan was taking over America.
Another fretted that it might be a prelude to service cuts.
Others fret that farmers will be wiped out by foreign imports.