(1) Though she did not relish being alone in the apartment for any length of time.
(2) This could have been a job for life, but Baxter describes with relish and relief the sense that was abroad in the 1960s of provincial Australian society opening up, with more possibilities.
(3) Many relish its sweet taste, but it is by and large an acquired one.
(4) She swigged a mouthful of wine with relish
(5) But do I relish the idea of playing a character where you're not playing the lead role and where you can turn up and absolutely go crazy?
(6) The relish with which we tackle the prospect of a bit of weather is our last remaining national characteristic transcending the divisions of class, age, race and fashionable intelligence.
(7) My dinner companions are a multinational mix of people tucking into the juicy Argentine beef with equal relish .
(8) There had been relish and delight in his voice when he spoke of those possibilities.
(9) With considerable relish , Asbury chronicles the history of the multitude of gangs who fought to control the streets of the Bowery, Hell's Kitchen and the Five Points.
(10) I was appointed to a position for which I had little relish
(11) We do not relish the idea of going through another inquest, and no doubt neither does anyone else involved.
(12) I didn't really relish going in search of the missing woman.
(13) But it's done with such relish and infectious enthusiasm that it feels like a much lighter read.
(14) She smiled at them and returned to her food with slow, obvious relish .
(15) Meticulously, and with obvious relish she worked the marrow out with her tongue.
(16) Not to sound like a wuss, but even at 60-plus, he's just not a guy you wanna get in an argument with, and I frankly don't relish the idea.
(17) None of this is to say that I relish the idea of having to pay more money for school.
(18) He certainly knew what another meant, and did not relish the idea of being blown to kingdom come for his transgressions.
(19) The tired glutton finds no relish in the sweetest meat
(20) In fact, while we're at it, we'd relish the idea of governments hiking prices another 20 cents a litre, say, and pumping the resulting revenue directly into public transit.