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Embraces

   Also found in: Legal, Wikipedia 0.01 sec.
em·brace  (m-brs)
v. em·braced, em·brac·ing, em·brac·es
v.tr.
1. To clasp or hold close with the arms, usually as an expression of affection.
2.
a. To surround; enclose: We allowed the warm water to embrace us.
b. To twine around: a trellis that was embraced by vines.
3. To include as part of something broader. See Synonyms at include.
4. To take up willingly or eagerly: embrace a social cause.
5. To avail oneself of: "I only regret, in my chilled age, certain occasions and possibilities I didn't embrace" (Henry James).
v.intr.
To join in an embrace.
n.
1. An act of holding close with the arms, usually as an expression of affection; a hug.
2. An enclosure or encirclement: caught in the jungle's embrace.
3. Eager acceptance: your embrace of Catholicism.

[Middle English embracen, from Old French embracer : en-, in; see en-1 + brace, the two arms; see brace.]

em·bracea·ble adj.
em·bracement n.

Embraces 

See Also: KISSES; MEN AND WOMEN; PEOPLE, INTERACTIONS; SEXUAL INTERACTION

  1. Almost completely covered by MaButhelezi’s big arms, like a blanket of flesh —Njabulo Ndebele
  2. Clasped each other like a pair of abandoned children —Natascha Wodin
  3. Clinch like lovers at the final fade out —George Garrett
  4. Curled up together like a pair of old dogs —Jean Thompson
  5. Drawing her toward him he held her and squeezed her out like a bit of old washing —Edna O’Brien
  6. Drew her to him, crushing her like a pale flower to his breast —Peter De Vries
  7. Drew the child to her as if she were a springing young tree —Elizabeth Taylor
  8. Embraced Himiko [name of a character] like a bear hugging an enemy —Kenzaburo Oe
  9. Embraced him like a hot, wet towel —William H. Hallhan
  10. Embraced like bears —Madison Smartt Bell
  11. Embrace like penpals —Ira Wood
  12. Embraces are keen like pain —Algernon Charles Swinburne
  13. Her embrace was clumsy like a bad dancer’s —John Braine
  14. Her long thin arms came up to wind about him and inexorably, like tight thin wires, to hold him down —H. E. Bates
  15. His arm around her felt as if she’d been born with it there —William Mcllvanney
  16. His arms are like a cradle in which she is warm and safe —Alvin Boretz, television program, 1986
  17. Hold hands like teenagers, fingers meshed like the teeth of rusty gears —Ira Wood
  18. Lay locked like human vines —Charles Bukowski
  19. Let our arms clasp like ivy —John Donne
  20. Locked in a profound embrace … like Ahab and the whale —A. R. Guerney, Jr.
    Guerney’s simile refers to the guests in his play The Perfect Party.
  21. Marg’s long tanned body entwined Fencer’s like a constricting serpent —Robert Stone
  22. Pressed herself upon me like someone pressing upon a bruise —Lawrence Durrell
  23. She vibrated in his arms like a tuning fork —Andrew Kaplan
  24. Snuggled up together like spoons in bed —Phyllis Naylor
  25. They’d lie together, like a four-armed creature fearful of amputation —Julia O’Faolain
  26. Was so huge and soft it was like embracing a cloud and sinking down —Lee Smith


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Everybody knows that the great reversed triangle of land, with its base in the north and its apex in the south, which is called India, embraces fourteen hundred thousand square miles, upon which is spread unequally a population of one hundred and eighty millions of souls.
It is impossible to describe the shrieks of joy, the warm embraces, the knocks, and the friendly greetings with which that strange company of dramatic actors and actresses received Pinocchio.
It would be such a scandal that when I had risen from your embraces I could never show myself inside your house again; but if you are so minded, there is a room which your son Vulcan has made me, and he has given it good strong doors; if you would so have it, let us go thither and lie down.
 
 
 
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