Instinctively, we tend to feel that victims of famines and earthquakes need food and shelter rather than inedible cash.
In fact, many of the techniques kids instinctively use to make friends on the playground work for ages 4 thru 104.
As US-based doctor Joseph Mercola writes on his webpage: 'Infants instinctively squat to defecate, as does the majority of the world's population.
China has 5,000 years of history and that means 5,000 years of knowing instinctively that pedestrians have no right of way.
In fact, many of the techniques kids instinctively use to make friends on the playground work for ages 4 thru 104.
Instinctively, we bonded to our mothers for survival and eventually understood the protective potential of our fathers.
My eyes turned instinctively in that direction, and I saw a figure leap with great rapidity behind the trunk of a pine.
We are instinctively compelled to find fault in our lives.
Men instinctively adopt a pitch-variable, or sing-song tone – in a similar way that people speak to a baby – when talking to a woman they find attractive, a new study has found.
When there is a gap between one's real and one's declared aims, one turns as it were instinctively to long words and exhausted idioms, like a cuttlefish spurting out ink.
Christina Baldwin The only sense that is common in the long run, is the sense of change-and we all instinctively avoid it.
" Instinctively, the clerk obeyed, and left the cage; at the same moment the half-opened door leading into the next room creaked on its hinges, and, stealthily, with green fiery eyes, the cat crept in and chased the lark round the room.
Jim abandoned his plans for a graceful swan dive and instinctively assumed the cannonball position - known for its magnificent splash.